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FISH-DOC(1) fish-shell FISH-DOC(1)

This is the documentation for fish, the friendly interactive shell.

A shell is a program that helps you operate your computer by starting other programs. fish offers a command-line interface focused on usability and interactive use.

Some of the special features of fish are:

  • Extensive UI: Syntax highlighting, Autosuggestions, tab completion and selection lists that can be navigated and filtered.
  • No configuration needed: fish is designed to be ready to use immediately, without requiring extensive configuration.
  • Easy scripting: New functions can be added on the fly. The syntax is easy to learn and use.

This page explains how to install and set up fish and where to get more information.

WHERE TO GO?

If this is your first time using fish, see the tutorial.

If you are already familiar with other shells like bash and want to see the scripting differences, see Fish For Bash Users.

For an overview of fish's scripting language, see The Fish Language. If it would be useful in a script file, it's here.

For information on using fish interactively, see Interactive use. If it's about key presses, syntax highlighting or anything else that needs an interactive terminal session, look here.

If you need to install fish first, read on, the rest of this document will tell you how to get, install and configure fish.

INSTALLATION

This section describes how to install, uninstall, start, and exit fish. It also explains how to make fish the default shell.

Installation

Up-to-date instructions for installing the latest version of fish are on the fish homepage <https://fishshell.com/>.

To install the development version of fish, see the instructions on the project's GitHub page <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell>.

Starting and Exiting

Once fish has been installed, open a terminal. If fish is not the default shell:

Type fish to start a shell:

> fish


Type exit to end the session:

> exit



Default Shell

There are multiple ways to switch to fish (or any other shell) as your default.

The simplest method is to set your terminal emulator (eg GNOME Terminal, Apple's Terminal.app, or Konsole) to start fish directly. See its configuration and set the program to start to /usr/local/bin/fish (if that's where fish is installed - substitute another location as appropriate).

Alternatively, you can set fish as your login shell so that it will be started by all terminal logins, including SSH.

WARNING:

Setting fish as your login shell may cause issues, such as an incorrect PATH. Some operating systems, including a number of Linux distributions, require the login shell to be Bourne-compatible and to read configuration from /etc/profile. fish may not be suitable as a login shell on these systems.


To change your login shell to fish:

1.
Add the shell to /etc/shells with:

> echo /usr/local/bin/fish | sudo tee -a /etc/shells


2.
Change your default shell with:

> chsh -s /usr/local/bin/fish



Again, substitute the path to fish for /usr/local/bin/fish - see command -s fish inside fish. To change it back to another shell, just substitute /usr/local/bin/fish with /bin/bash, /bin/tcsh or /bin/zsh as appropriate in the steps above.

Uninstalling

For uninstalling fish: see FAQ: Uninstalling fish.

Shebang Line

Because shell scripts are written in many different languages, they need to carry information about which interpreter should be used to execute them. For this, they are expected to have a first line, the shebang line, which names the interpreter executable.

A script written in bash would need a first line like this:

#!/bin/bash


When the shell tells the kernel to execute the file, it will use the interpreter /bin/bash.

For a script written in another language, just replace /bin/bash with the interpreter for that language. For example: /usr/bin/python for a python script, or /usr/local/bin/fish for a fish script, if that is where you have them installed.

If you want to share your script with others, you might want to use env to allow for the interpreter to be installed in other locations. For example:

#!/usr/bin/env fish
echo Hello from fish $version


This will call env, which then goes through PATH to find a program called "fish". This makes it work, whether fish is installed in (for example) /usr/local/bin/fish, /usr/bin/fish, or ~/.local/bin/fish, as long as that directory is in PATH.

The shebang line is only used when scripts are executed without specifying the interpreter. For functions inside fish or when executing a script with fish /path/to/script, a shebang is not required (but it doesn't hurt!).

When executing files without an interpreter, fish, like other shells, tries your system shell, typically /bin/sh. This is needed because some scripts are shipped without a shebang line.

CONFIGURATION

To store configuration write it to a file called ~/.config/fish/config.fish.

.fish scripts in ~/.config/fish/conf.d/ are also automatically executed before config.fish.

These files are read on the startup of every shell, whether interactive and/or if they're login shells. Use status --is-interactive and status --is-login to do things only in interactive/login shells, respectively.

This is the short version; for a full explanation, like for sysadmins or integration for developers of other software, see Configuration files.

If you want to see what you changed over fish's defaults, see fish_delta.

Examples:

To add ~/linux/bin to PATH variable when using a login shell, add this to ~/.config/fish/config.fish file:

if status --is-login

set -gx PATH $PATH ~/linux/bin end


This is just an example; using fish_add_path e.g. fish_add_path ~/linux/bin which only adds the path if it isn't included yet is easier.

To run commands on exit, use an event handler that is triggered by the exit of the shell:

function on_exit --on-event fish_exit

echo fish is now exiting end


RESOURCES


If you have an improvement for fish, you can submit it via the GitHub page.

OTHER HELP PAGES

Frequently asked questions

What is the equivalent to this thing from bash (or other shells)?

See Fish for bash users

How do I set or clear an environment variable?

Use the set command:

set -x key value # typically set -gx key value
set -e key


Since fish 3.1 you can set an environment variable for just one command using the key=value some command syntax, like in other shells. The two lines below behave identically - unlike other shells, fish will output value both times:

key=value echo $key
begin; set -lx key value; echo $key; end


Note that "exported" is not a scope, but an additional bit of state. A variable can be global and exported or local and exported or even universal and exported. Typically it makes sense to make an exported variable global.

How do I check whether a variable is defined?

Use set -q var. For example, if set -q var; echo variable defined; end. To check multiple variables you can combine with and and or like so:

if set -q var1; or set -q var2

echo either variable defined end


Keep in mind that a defined variable could also be empty, either by having no elements (if set like set var) or only empty elements (if set like set var ""). Read on for how to deal with those.

How do I check whether a variable is not empty?

Use string length -q -- $var. For example, if string length -q -- $var; echo not empty; end. Note that string length will interpret a list of multiple variables as a disjunction (meaning any/or):

if string length -q -- $var1 $var2 $var3

echo at least one of these variables is not empty end


Alternatively, use test -n "$var", but remember that the variable must be double-quoted. For example, if test -n "$var"; echo not empty; end. The test command provides its own and (-a) and or (-o):

if test -n "$var1" -o -n "$var2" -o -n "$var3"

echo at least one of these variables is not empty end


If you want to know if a variable has no elements, use set -q var[1].

Why doesn't set -Ux (exported universal variables) seem to work?

A global variable of the same name already exists.

Environment variables such as EDITOR or TZ can be set universally using set -Ux. However, if there is an environment variable already set before fish starts (such as by login scripts or system administrators), it is imported into fish as a global variable. The variable scopes are searched from the "inside out", which means that local variables are checked first, followed by global variables, and finally universal variables.

This means that the global value takes precedence over the universal value.

To avoid this problem, consider changing the setting which fish inherits. If this is not possible, add a statement to your configuration file (usually ~/.config/fish/config.fish):

set -gx EDITOR vim


How do I run a command every login? What's fish's equivalent to .bashrc or .profile?

Edit the file ~/.config/fish/config.fish [1], creating it if it does not exist (Note the leading period).

Unlike .bashrc and .profile, this file is always read, even in non-interactive or login shells.

To do something only in interactive shells, check status is-interactive like:

if status is-interactive

# use the coolbeans theme
fish_config theme choose coolbeans end


[1]
The "~/.config" part of this can be set via $XDG_CONFIG_HOME, that's just the default.

How do I set my prompt?

The prompt is the output of the fish_prompt function. Put it in ~/.config/fish/functions/fish_prompt.fish. For example, a simple prompt is:

function fish_prompt

set_color $fish_color_cwd
echo -n (prompt_pwd)
set_color normal
echo -n ' > ' end


You can also use the Web configuration tool, fish_config, to preview and choose from a gallery of sample prompts.

Or you can use fish_config from the commandline:

> fish_config prompt show
# displays all the prompts fish ships with
> fish_config prompt choose disco
# loads the disco prompt in the current shell
> fish_config prompt save
# makes the change permanent


If you want to modify your existing prompt, you can use funced and funcsave like:

>_ funced fish_prompt
# This opens up your editor (set in $EDITOR).
# Modify the function,
# save the file and repeat to your liking.
# Once you are happy with it:
>_ funcsave fish_prompt


This also applies to fish_right_prompt and fish_mode_prompt.

Why does my prompt show a [I]?

That's the fish_mode_prompt. It is displayed by default when you've activated vi mode using fish_vi_key_bindings.

If you haven't activated vi mode on purpose, you might have installed a third-party theme or plugin that does it.

If you want to change or disable this display, modify the fish_mode_prompt function, for instance via funced.

How do I customize my syntax highlighting colors?

Use the web configuration tool, fish_config, or alter the fish_color family of environment variables.

You can also use fish_config on the commandline, like:

> fish_config theme show
# to demonstrate all the colorschemes
> fish_config theme choose coolbeans
# to load the "coolbeans" theme
> fish_config theme save
# to make the change permanent


How do I change the greeting message?

Change the value of the variable fish_greeting or create a fish_greeting function. For example, to remove the greeting use:

set -U fish_greeting


Or if you prefer not to use a universal variable, use:

set -g fish_greeting


in config.fish.

How do I run a command from history?

Type some part of the command, and then hit the up () or down () arrow keys to navigate through history matches, or press ctrl-r to open the history in a searchable pager. In this pager you can press ctrl-r or ctrl-s to move to older or younger history respectively.

Additional default key bindings include ctrl-p (up) and ctrl-n (down). See Searchable command history for more information.

Why doesn't history substitution ("!$" etc.) work?

Because history substitution is an awkward interface that was invented before interactive line editing was even possible. Instead of adding this pseudo-syntax, fish opts for nice history searching and recall features. Switching requires a small change of habits: if you want to modify an old line/word, first recall it, then edit.

As a special case, most of the time history substitution is used as sudo !!. In that case just press alt-s, and it will recall your last commandline with sudo prefixed (or toggle a sudo prefix on the current commandline if there is anything).

In general, fish's history recall works like this:

  • Like other shells, the Up arrow, up recalls whole lines, starting from the last executed line. So instead of typing !!, you would just hit the up-arrow.
  • If the line you want is far back in the history, type any part of the line and then press Up one or more times. This will filter the recalled lines to ones that include this text, and you will get to the line you want much faster. This replaces "!vi", "!?bar.c" and the like. If you want to see more context, you can press ctrl-r to open the history in the pager.
  • alt-up recalls individual arguments, starting from the last argument in the last executed line. This can be used instead of "!$".

See documentation for more details about line editing in fish.

That being said, you can use Abbreviations to implement history substitution. Here's just !!:

function last_history_item; echo $history[1]; end
abbr -a !! --position anywhere --function last_history_item


Run this and !! will be replaced with the last history entry, anywhere on the commandline. Put it into config.fish to keep it.

How do I run a subcommand? The backtick doesn't work!

fish uses parentheses for subcommands. For example:

for i in (ls)

echo $i end


It also supports the familiar $() syntax, even in quotes. Backticks are not supported because they are discouraged even in POSIX shells. They nest poorly and are hard to tell from single quotes ('').

My command (pkg-config) gives its output as a single long string?

Unlike other shells, fish splits command substitutions only on newlines, not spaces or tabs or the characters in $IFS.

That means if you run

count (printf '%s ' a b c)


It will print 1, because the "a b c " is used in one piece. But if you do

count (printf '%s\n' a b c)


it will print 3, because it gave count the arguments "a", "b" and "c" separately.

In the overwhelming majority of cases, splitting on spaces is unwanted, so this is an improvement. This is why you hear about problems with filenames with spaces, after all.

However sometimes, especially with pkg-config and related tools, splitting on spaces is needed.

In these cases use string split -n " " like:

g++ example_01.cpp (pkg-config --cflags --libs gtk+-2.0 | string split -n " ")


The -n is so empty elements are removed like POSIX shells would do.

How do I get the exit status of a command?

Use the $status variable. This replaces the $? variable used in other shells.

somecommand
if test $status -eq 7

echo "That's my lucky number!" end


If you are just interested in success or failure, you can run the command directly as the if-condition:

if somecommand

echo "Command succeeded" else
echo "Command failed" end


Or if you just want to do one command in case the first succeeded or failed, use and or or:

somecommand
or someothercommand


See the Conditions and the documentation for test and if for more information.

My command prints "No matches for wildcard" but works in bash

In short: quote or escape the wildcard:

scp user@ip:/dir/"string-*"


When fish sees an unquoted *, it performs wildcard expansion. That means it tries to match filenames to the given string.

If the wildcard doesn't match any files, fish prints an error instead of running the command:

> echo *this*does*not*exist
fish: No matches for wildcard '*this*does*not*exist'. See `help expand`.
echo *this*does*not*exist

^


Now, bash also tries to match files in this case, but when it doesn't find a match, it passes along the literal wildcard string instead.

That means that commands like the above

scp user@ip:/dir/string-*


or

apt install postgres-*


appear to work, because most of the time the string doesn't match and so it passes along the string-*, which is then interpreted by the receiving program.

But it also means that these commands can stop working at any moment once a matching file is encountered (because it has been created or the command is executed in a different working directory), and to deal with that bash needs workarounds like

for f in ./*.mpg; do

# We need to test if the file really exists because
# the wildcard might have failed to match.
test -f "$f" || continue
mympgviewer "$f" done


(from http://mywiki.wooledge.org/BashFAQ/004)

For these reasons, fish does not do this, and instead expects asterisks to be quoted or escaped if they aren't supposed to be expanded.

This is similar to bash's "failglob" option.

Why won't SSH/SCP/rsync connect properly when fish is my login shell?

This problem may show up as messages like "Received message too long", "open terminal failed: not a terminal", "Bad packet length", or "Connection refused" with strange output in ssh_exchange_identification messages in the debug log.

This usually happens because fish reads the user configuration file (~/.config/fish/config.fish) always, whether it's in an interactive or login or non-interactive or non-login shell.

This simplifies matters, but it also means when config.fish generates output, it will do that even in non-interactive shells like the one ssh/scp/rsync start when they connect.

Anything in config.fish that produces output should be guarded with status is-interactive (or status is-login if you prefer):

if status is-interactive

... end


The same applies for example when you start tmux in config.fish without guards, which will cause a message like sessions should be nested with care, unset $TMUX to force.

I'm getting weird graphical glitches (a staircase effect, ghost characters, cursor in the wrong position,...)?

In a terminal, the application running inside it and the terminal itself need to agree on the width of characters in order to handle cursor movement.

This is more important to fish than other shells because features like syntax highlighting and autosuggestions are implemented by moving the cursor.

Sometimes, there is disagreement on the width. There are numerous causes and fixes for this:

  • It is possible the character is simply too new for your system to know - in this case you need to refrain from using it.
  • Fish or your terminal might not know about the character or handle it wrong - in this case fish or your terminal needs to be fixed, or you need to update to a fixed version.
  • The character has an "ambiguous" width and fish thinks that means a width of X while your terminal thinks it's Y. In this case you either need to change your terminal's configuration or set $fish_ambiguous_width to the correct value.
  • The character is an emoji and the host system only supports Unicode 8, while you are running the terminal on a system that uses Unicode >= 9. In this case set $fish_emoji_width to 2.

This also means that a few things are unsupportable:

  • Non-monospace fonts - there is no way for fish to figure out what width a specific character has as it has no influence on the terminal's font rendering.
  • Different widths for multiple ambiguous width characters - there is no way for fish to know which width you assign to each character.

Uninstalling fish

If you want to uninstall fish, first make sure fish is not set as your shell. Run chsh -s /bin/bash if you are not sure.

If you installed it with a package manager, just use that package manager's uninstall function. If you built fish yourself, assuming you installed it to /usr/local, do this:

rm -Rf /usr/local/etc/fish /usr/local/share/fish ~/.config/fish
rm /usr/local/share/man/man1/fish*.1
cd /usr/local/bin
rm -f fish fish_indent


Interactive use

Fish prides itself on being really nice to use interactively. That's down to a few features we'll explain in the next few sections.

Fish is used by giving commands in the fish language, see The Fish Language for information on that.

Help

Fish has an extensive help system. Use the help command to obtain help on a specific subject or command. For instance, writing help syntax displays the syntax section of this documentation.

Fish also has man pages for its commands, and translates the help pages to man pages. For example, man set will show the documentation for set as a man page.

Help on a specific builtin can also be obtained with the -h parameter. For instance, to obtain help on the fg builtin, either type fg -h or help fg.

The main page can be viewed via help index (or just help) or man fish-doc. The tutorial can be viewed with help tutorial or man fish-tutorial.

Autosuggestions

fish suggests commands as you type, based on command history, completions, and valid file paths. As you type commands, you will see a suggestion offered after the cursor, in a muted gray color (which can be changed with the fish_color_autosuggestion variable).

To accept the autosuggestion (replacing the command line contents), press right () or ctrl-f. To accept the first suggested word, press alt-right () or alt-f. If the autosuggestion is not what you want, just ignore it: it won't execute unless you accept it.

Autosuggestions are a powerful way to quickly summon frequently entered commands, by typing the first few characters. They are also an efficient technique for navigating through directory hierarchies.

If you don't like autosuggestions, you can disable them by setting $fish_autosuggestion_enabled to 0:

set -g fish_autosuggestion_enabled 0


Tab Completion

Tab completion is a time saving feature of any modern shell. When you type tab, fish tries to guess the rest of the word under the cursor. If it finds just one possibility, it inserts it. If it finds more, it inserts the longest unambiguous part and then opens a menu (the "pager") that you can navigate to find what you're looking for.

The pager can be navigated with the arrow keys, pageup / pagedown, tab or shift-tab. Pressing ctrl-s (the pager-toggle-search binding - / in vi mode) opens up a search menu that you can use to filter the list.

Fish provides some general purpose completions, like for commands, variable names, usernames or files.

It also provides a large number of program specific scripted completions. Most of these completions are simple options like the -l option for ls, but a lot are more advanced. For example:

  • man and whatis show the installed manual pages as completions.
  • make uses targets in the Makefile in the current directory as completions.
  • mount uses mount points specified in fstab as completions.
  • apt, rpm and yum show installed or installable packages

You can also write your own completions or install some you got from someone else. For that, see Writing your own completions.

Completion scripts are loaded on demand, just like functions are. The difference is the $fish_complete_path list is used instead of $fish_function_path. Typically you can drop new completions in ~/.config/fish/completions/name-of-command.fish and fish will find them automatically.

Syntax highlighting

Fish interprets the command line as it is typed and uses syntax highlighting to provide feedback. The most important feedback is the detection of potential errors. By default, errors are marked red.

Detected errors include:

  • Non-existing commands.
  • Reading from or appending to a non-existing file.
  • Incorrect use of output redirects
  • Mismatched parenthesis

To customize the syntax highlighting, you can set the environment variables listed in the Variables for changing highlighting colors section.

Fish also provides pre-made color themes you can pick with fish_config. Running just fish_config opens a browser interface, or you can use fish_config theme in the terminal.

For example, to disable nearly all coloring:

fish_config theme choose None


Or, to see all themes, right in your terminal:

fish_config theme show


Syntax highlighting variables

The colors used by fish for syntax highlighting can be configured by changing the values of various variables. The value of these variables can be one of the colors accepted by the set_color command. The modifier switches accepted by set_color like --bold, --dim, --italics, --reverse and --underline are also accepted.

Example: to make errors highlighted and red, use:

set fish_color_error red --bold


The following variables are available to change the highlighting colors in fish:

Variable Meaning
0.0 fish_color_normal 168u default color
0.0 fish_color_command 168u commands like echo
0.0 fish_color_keyword 168u keywords like if - this falls back on the command color if unset
0.0 fish_color_quote 168u quoted text like "abc"
0.0 fish_color_redirection 168u IO redirections like >/dev/null
0.0 fish_color_end 168u process separators like ; and &
0.0 fish_color_error 168u syntax errors
0.0 fish_color_param 168u ordinary command parameters
0.0 fish_color_valid_path 168u parameters that are filenames (if the file exists)
0.0 fish_color_option 168u options starting with "-", up to the first "--" parameter
0.0 fish_color_comment 168u comments like '# important'
0.0 fish_color_selection 168u selected text in vi visual mode
0.0 fish_color_operator 168u parameter expansion operators like * and ~
0.0 fish_color_escape 168u character escapes like \n and \x70
0.0 fish_color_autosuggestion 168u autosuggestions (the proposed rest of a command)
0.0 fish_color_cwd 168u the current working directory in the default prompt
0.0 fish_color_cwd_root 168u the current working directory in the default prompt for the root user
0.0 fish_color_user 168u the username in the default prompt
0.0 fish_color_host 168u the hostname in the default prompt
0.0 fish_color_host_remote 168u the hostname in the default prompt for remote sessions (like ssh)
0.0 fish_color_status 168u the last command's nonzero exit code in the default prompt
0.0 fish_color_cancel 168u the '^C' indicator on a canceled command
0.0 fish_color_search_match 168u history search matches and selected pager items (background only)
0.0 fish_color_history_current 168u the current position in the history for commands like dirh and cdh

If a variable isn't set or is empty, fish usually tries $fish_color_normal, except for:

  • $fish_color_keyword, where it tries $fish_color_command first.
  • $fish_color_option, where it tries $fish_color_param first.
  • For $fish_color_valid_path, if that doesn't have a color, but only modifiers, it adds those to the color that would otherwise be used, like $fish_color_param. But if valid paths have a color, it uses that and adds in modifiers from the other color.

Pager color variables

fish will sometimes present a list of choices in a table, called the pager.

Example: to set the background of each pager row, use:

set fish_pager_color_background --background=white


To have black text on alternating white and gray backgrounds:

set fish_pager_color_prefix black
set fish_pager_color_completion black
set fish_pager_color_description black
set fish_pager_color_background --background=white
set fish_pager_color_secondary_background --background=brwhite


Variables affecting the pager colors:

Variable Meaning
0.0 fish_pager_color_progress 168u the progress bar at the bottom left corner
0.0 fish_pager_color_background 168u the background color of a line
0.0 fish_pager_color_prefix 168u the prefix string, i.e. the string that is to be completed
0.0 fish_pager_color_completion 168u the completion itself, i.e. the proposed rest of the string
0.0 fish_pager_color_description 168u the completion description
0.0 fish_pager_color_selected_background 168u background of the selected completion
0.0 fish_pager_color_selected_prefix 168u prefix of the selected completion
0.0 fish_pager_color_selected_completion 168u suffix of the selected completion
0.0 fish_pager_color_selected_description 168u description of the selected completion
0.0 fish_pager_color_secondary_background 168u background of every second unselected completion
0.0 fish_pager_color_secondary_prefix 168u prefix of every second unselected completion
0.0 fish_pager_color_secondary_completion 168u suffix of every second unselected completion
0.0 fish_pager_color_secondary_description 168u description of every second unselected completion

When the secondary or selected variables aren't set or are empty, the normal variables are used, except for $fish_pager_color_selected_background, where the background of $fish_color_search_match is tried first.

Abbreviations

To avoid needless typing, a frequently-run command like git checkout can be abbreviated to gco using the abbr command.

abbr -a gco git checkout


After entering gco and pressing space or enter, a gco in command position will turn into git checkout in the command line. If you want to use a literal gco sometimes, use ctrl-space [1].

Abbreviations are a lot more powerful than just replacing literal strings. For example you can make going up a number of directories easier with this:

function multicd

echo cd (string repeat -n (math (string length -- $argv[1]) - 1) ../) end abbr --add dotdot --regex '^\.\.+$' --function multicd


Now, .. transforms to cd ../, while ... turns into cd ../../ and .... expands to cd ../../../.

The advantage over aliases is that you can see the actual command before using it, add to it or change it, and the actual command will be stored in history.

[1]
Any binding that executes the expand-abbr or execute bind function will expand abbreviations. By default ctrl-space is bound to just inserting a space.

Programmable prompt

When it is fish's turn to ask for input (like after it started or the command ended), it will show a prompt. Often this looks something like:

you@hostname ~>


This prompt is determined by running the fish_prompt and fish_right_prompt functions.

The output of the former is displayed on the left and the latter's output on the right side of the terminal. For vi mode, the output of fish_mode_prompt will be prepended on the left.

Fish ships with a few prompts which you can see with fish_config. If you run just fish_config it will open a web interface [2] where you'll be shown the prompts and can pick which one you want. fish_config prompt show will show you the prompts right in your terminal.

For example fish_config prompt choose disco will temporarily select the "disco" prompt. If you like it and decide to keep it, run fish_config prompt save.

You can also change these functions yourself by running funced fish_prompt and funcsave fish_prompt once you are happy with the result (or fish_right_prompt if you want to change that).

[2]
The web interface runs purely locally on your computer and requires python to be installed.

Configurable greeting

When it is started interactively, fish tries to run the fish_greeting function. The default fish_greeting prints a simple message. You can change its text by changing the $fish_greeting variable, for instance using a universal variable:

set -U fish_greeting


or you can set it globally in config.fish:

set -g fish_greeting 'Hey, stranger!'


or you can script it by changing the function:

function fish_greeting

random choice "Hello!" "Hi" "G'day" "Howdy" end


save this in config.fish or a function file. You can also use funced and funcsave to edit it easily.

Programmable title

When using most terminals, it is possible to set the text displayed in the titlebar of the terminal window. Fish does this by running the fish_title function. It is executed before and after a command and the output is used as a titlebar message.

The status current-command builtin will always return the name of the job to be put into the foreground (or fish if control is returning to the shell) when the fish_title function is called. The first argument will contain the most recently executed foreground command as a string.

The default title shows the hostname if connected via ssh, the currently running command (unless it is fish) and the current working directory. All of this is shortened to not make the tab too wide.

Examples:

To show the last command and working directory in the title:

function fish_title

# `prompt_pwd` shortens the title. This helps prevent tabs from becoming very wide.
echo $argv[1] (prompt_pwd)
pwd end


Command line editor

The fish editor features copy and paste, a searchable history and many editor functions that can be bound to special keyboard shortcuts.

Like bash and other shells, fish includes two sets of keyboard shortcuts (or key bindings): one inspired by the Emacs text editor, and one by the vi text editor. The default editing mode is Emacs. You can switch to vi mode by running fish_vi_key_bindings and switch back with fish_default_key_bindings. You can also make your own key bindings by creating a function and setting the fish_key_bindings variable to its name. For example:

function fish_hybrid_key_bindings --description \
"Vi-style bindings that inherit emacs-style bindings in all modes"

for mode in default insert visual
fish_default_key_bindings -M $mode
end
fish_vi_key_bindings --no-erase end set -g fish_key_bindings fish_hybrid_key_bindings


While the key bindings included with fish include many of the shortcuts popular from the respective text editors, they are not a complete implementation. They include a shortcut to open the current command line in your preferred editor (alt-e by default) if you need the full power of your editor.

Shared bindings

Some bindings are common across Emacs and vi mode, because they aren't text editing bindings, or because what vi/Vim does for a particular key doesn't make sense for a shell.

  • tab completes the current token. shift-tab completes the current token and starts the pager's search mode. tab is the same as ctrl-i.
  • left () and right () move the cursor left or right by one character. If the cursor is already at the end of the line, and an autosuggestion is available, right () accepts the autosuggestion.
  • enter executes the current commandline or inserts a newline if it's not complete yet (e.g. a ) or end is missing).
  • alt-enter inserts a newline at the cursor position. This is useful to add a line to a commandline that's already complete.
  • alt-left () and alt-right () move the cursor one argument left or right, or moves forward/backward in the directory history if the command line is empty. If the cursor is already at the end of the line, and an autosuggestion is available, alt-right () (or alt-f) accepts the first argument in the suggestion.
  • ctrl-left () and ctrl-right () move the cursor one word left or right. These accept one word of the autosuggestion - the part they'd move over.
  • shift-left () and shift-right () move the cursor one word left or right, without stopping on punctuation. These accept one big word of the autosuggestion.
  • up () and down () (or ctrl-p and ctrl-n for emacs aficionados) search the command history for the previous/next command containing the string that was specified on the commandline before the search was started. If the commandline was empty when the search started, all commands match. See the history section for more information on history searching.
  • alt-up () and alt-down () search the command history for the previous/next token containing the token under the cursor before the search was started. If the commandline was not on a token when the search started, all tokens match. See the history section for more information on history searching.
  • ctrl-c interrupts/kills whatever is running (SIGINT).
  • ctrl-d deletes one character to the right of the cursor. If the command line is empty, ctrl-d will exit fish.
  • ctrl-u removes contents from the beginning of line to the cursor (moving it to the killring).
  • ctrl-l clears and repaints the screen.
  • ctrl-w removes the previous path component (everything up to the previous "/", ":" or "@") (moving it to the Copy and paste (Kill Ring)).
  • ctrl-x copies the current buffer to the system's clipboard, ctrl-v inserts the clipboard contents. (see fish_clipboard_copy and fish_clipboard_paste)
  • alt-d or ctrl-delete moves the next word to the Copy and paste (Kill Ring).
  • alt-delete moves the next argument to the Copy and paste (Kill Ring).
  • alt-h (or f1) shows the manual page for the current command, if one exists.
  • alt-l lists the contents of the current directory, unless the cursor is over a directory argument, in which case the contents of that directory will be listed.
  • alt-o opens the file at the cursor in a pager. If the cursor is in command position and the command is a script, it will instead open that script in your editor. The editor is chosen from the first available of the $VISUAL or $EDITOR variables.
  • alt-p adds the string &| less; to the end of the job under the cursor. The result is that the output of the command will be paged.
  • alt-w prints a short description of the command under the cursor.
  • alt-e edits the current command line in an external editor. The editor is chosen from the first available of the $VISUAL or $EDITOR variables.
  • alt-v Same as alt-e.
  • alt-s Prepends sudo to the current commandline. If the commandline is empty, prepend sudo to the last commandline.
  • ctrl-space Inserts a space without expanding an abbreviation. For vi mode, this only applies to insert-mode.

Emacs mode commands

To enable emacs mode, use fish_default_key_bindings. This is also the default.

  • home or ctrl-a moves the cursor to the beginning of the line.
  • end or ctrl-e moves to the end of line. If the cursor is already at the end of the line, and an autosuggestion is available, end or ctrl-e accepts the autosuggestion.
  • ctrl-b, ctrl-f move the cursor one character left or right or accept the autosuggestion just like the left () and right () shared bindings (which are available as well).
  • ctrl-n, ctrl-p move the cursor up/down or through history, like the up and down arrow shared bindings.
  • delete or backspace or ctrl-h removes one character forwards or backwards respectively.
  • ctrl-backspace removes one word backwards and alt-backspace removes one argument backwards.
  • alt-< moves to the beginning of the commandline, alt-> moves to the end.
  • ctrl-k deletes from the cursor to the end of line (moving it to the Copy and paste (Kill Ring)).
  • escape and ctrl-g cancel the current operation. Immediately after an unambiguous completion this undoes it.
  • alt-c capitalizes the current word.
  • alt-u makes the current word uppercase.
  • ctrl-t transposes the last two characters.
  • alt-t transposes the last two words.
  • ctrl-z, ctrl-_ (ctrl-/ on some terminals) undo the most recent edit of the line.
  • alt-/ reverts the most recent undo.
  • ctrl-r opens the history in a pager. This will show history entries matching the search, a few at a time. Pressing ctrl-r again will search older entries, pressing ctrl-s (that otherwise toggles pager search) will go to newer entries. The search bar will always be selected.

You can change these key bindings using the bind builtin.

Vi mode commands

Vi mode allows for the use of vi-like commands at the prompt. Initially, insert mode is active. escape enters command mode. The commands available in command, insert and visual mode are described below. Vi mode shares some bindings with Emacs mode.

To enable vi mode, use fish_vi_key_bindings. It is also possible to add all Emacs mode bindings to vi mode by using something like:

function fish_user_key_bindings

# Execute this once per mode that emacs bindings should be used in
fish_default_key_bindings -M insert
# Then execute the vi-bindings so they take precedence when there's a conflict.
# Without --no-erase fish_vi_key_bindings will default to
# resetting all bindings.
# The argument specifies the initial mode (insert, "default" or visual).
fish_vi_key_bindings --no-erase insert end


When in vi mode, the fish_mode_prompt function will display a mode indicator to the left of the prompt. To disable this feature, override it with an empty function. To display the mode elsewhere (like in your right prompt), use the output of the fish_default_mode_prompt function.

When a binding switches the mode, it will repaint the mode-prompt if it exists, and the rest of the prompt only if it doesn't. So if you want a mode-indicator in your fish_prompt, you need to erase fish_mode_prompt e.g. by adding an empty file at ~/.config/fish/functions/fish_mode_prompt.fish. (Bindings that change the mode are supposed to call the repaint-mode bind function, see bind)

The fish_vi_cursor function will be used to change the cursor's shape depending on the mode in supported terminals. The following snippet can be used to manually configure cursors after enabling vi mode:

# Emulates vim's cursor shape behavior
# Set the normal and visual mode cursors to a block
set fish_cursor_default block
# Set the insert mode cursor to a line
set fish_cursor_insert line
# Set the replace mode cursors to an underscore
set fish_cursor_replace_one underscore
set fish_cursor_replace underscore
# Set the external cursor to a line. The external cursor appears when a command is started.
# The cursor shape takes the value of fish_cursor_default when fish_cursor_external is not specified.
set fish_cursor_external line
# The following variable can be used to configure cursor shape in
# visual mode, but due to fish_cursor_default, is redundant here
set fish_cursor_visual block


Additionally, blink can be added after each of the cursor shape parameters to set a blinking cursor in the specified shape.

Fish knows the shapes "block", "line" and "underscore", other values will be ignored.

If the cursor shape does not appear to be changing after setting the above variables, it's likely your terminal emulator does not support the capabilities necessary to do this.

Command mode

Command mode is also known as normal mode.

  • h moves the cursor left.
  • l moves the cursor right.
  • k and j search the command history for the previous/next command containing the string that was specified on the commandline before the search was started. If the commandline was empty when the search started, all commands match. See the history section for more information on history searching. In multi-line commands, they move the cursor up and down respectively.
  • i enters insert mode at the current cursor position.
  • I enters insert mode at the beginning of the line.
  • v enters visual mode at the current cursor position.
  • a enters insert mode after the current cursor position.
  • A enters insert mode at the end of the line.
  • o inserts a new line under the current one and enters insert mode
  • O (capital-"o") inserts a new line above the current one and enters insert mode
  • 0 (zero) moves the cursor to beginning of line (remaining in command mode).
  • d,d deletes the current line and moves it to the Copy and paste (Kill Ring).
  • D deletes text after the current cursor position and moves it to the Copy and paste (Kill Ring).
  • p pastes text from the Copy and paste (Kill Ring).
  • u undoes the most recent edit of the command line.
  • ctrl-r redoes the most recent edit.
  • [ and ] search the command history for the previous/next token containing the token under the cursor before the search was started. See the history section for more information on history searching.
  • / opens the history in a pager. This will show history entries matching the search, a few at a time. Pressing it again will search older entries, pressing ctrl-s (that otherwise toggles pager search) will go to newer entries. The search bar will always be selected.
  • backspace moves the cursor left.
  • g / G moves the cursor to the beginning/end of the commandline, respectively.
  • :,q exits fish.

Insert mode

  • escape enters command mode.
  • backspace removes one character to the left.

Visual mode

  • left (``←`) and right`(``→`) extend the selection backward/forward by one character.
  • h moves the cursor left.
  • l moves the cursor right.
  • k moves the cursor up.
  • j moves the cursor down.
  • b and w extend the selection backward/forward by one word.
  • d and x move the selection to the Copy and paste (Kill Ring) and enter command mode.
  • escape and ctrl-c enter command mode.
  • c and s remove the selection and switch to insert mode.
  • X moves the entire line to the Copy and paste (Kill Ring), and enters command mode.
  • y copies the selection to the Copy and paste (Kill Ring), and enters command mode.
  • ~ toggles the case (upper/lower) on the selection, and enters command mode.
  • ",*,y copies the selection to the clipboard, and enters command mode.

Custom bindings

In addition to the standard bindings listed here, you can also define your own with bind:

# Just clear the commandline on control-c
bind ctrl-c 'commandline -r ""'


Put bind statements into config.fish or a function called fish_user_key_bindings.

If you change your mind on a binding and want to go back to fish's default, you can simply erase it again:

bind --erase ctrl-c


Fish remembers its preset bindings and so it will take effect again. This saves you from having to remember what it was before and add it again yourself.

If you use vi bindings, note that bind will by default bind keys in command mode. To bind something in insert mode:

bind --mode insert ctrl-c 'commandline -r ""'


Key sequences

To find out the name of a key, you can use fish_key_reader.

> fish_key_reader # Press Alt + right-arrow
Press a key:
bind alt-right 'do something'


Note that the historical way the terminal encodes keys and sends them to the application (fish, in this case) makes a lot of combinations indistinguishable or unbindable. In the usual encoding, ctrl-i is the same as the tab key, and shift cannot be detected when ctrl is also pressed.

There are more powerful encoding schemes, and fish tries to tell the terminal to turn them on, but there are still many terminals that do not support them. When fish_key_reader prints the same sequence for two different keys, then that is because your terminal sends the same sequence for them, and there isn't anything fish can do about it. It is our hope that these schemes will become more widespread, making input more flexible.

In the historical scheme, escape is the same thing as alt in a terminal. To distinguish between pressing escape and then another key, and pressing alt and that key (or an escape sequence the key sends), fish waits for a certain time after seeing an escape character. This is configurable via the fish_escape_delay_ms variable.

If you want to be able to press escape and then a character and have it count as alt+that character, set it to a higher value, e.g.:

set -g fish_escape_delay_ms 100


Similarly, to disambiguate other keypresses where you've bound a subsequence and a longer sequence, fish has fish_sequence_key_delay_ms:

# This binds the sequence j,k to switch to normal mode in vi mode.
# If you kept it like that, every time you press "j",
# fish would wait for a "k" or other key to disambiguate
bind -M insert -m default j,k cancel repaint-mode
# After setting this, fish only waits 200ms for the "k",
# or decides to treat the "j" as a separate sequence, inserting it.
set -g fish_sequence_key_delay_ms 200


Copy and paste (Kill Ring)

Fish uses an Emacs-style kill ring for copy and paste functionality. For example, use ctrl-k (kill-line) to cut from the current cursor position to the end of the line. The string that is cut (a.k.a. killed in emacs-ese) is inserted into a list of kills, called the kill ring. To paste the latest value from the kill ring (emacs calls this "yanking") use ctrl-y (the yank input function). After pasting, use alt-y (yank-pop) to rotate to the previous kill.

Copy and paste from outside are also supported, both via the ctrl-x / ctrl-v bindings (the fish_clipboard_copy and fish_clipboard_paste functions [3]) and via the terminal's paste function, for which fish enables "Bracketed Paste Mode", so it can tell a paste from manually entered text. In addition, when pasting inside single quotes, pasted single quotes and backslashes are automatically escaped so that the result can be used as a single token simply by closing the quote after. Kill ring entries are stored in fish_killring variable.

The commands begin-selection and end-selection (unbound by default; used for selection in vi visual mode) control text selection together with cursor movement commands that extend the current selection. The variable fish_cursor_selection_mode can be used to configure if that selection should include the character under the cursor (inclusive) or not (exclusive). The default is exclusive, which works well with any cursor shape. For vi mode, and particularly for the block or underscore cursor shapes you may prefer inclusive.

[3]
These rely on external tools. Currently xsel, xclip, wl-copy/wl-paste and pbcopy/pbpaste are supported.

Multiline editing

The fish commandline editor can be used to work on commands that are several lines long. There are three ways to make a command span more than a single line:

  • Pressing the enter key while a block of commands is unclosed, such as when one or more block commands such as for, begin or if do not have a corresponding end command.
  • Pressing alt-enter instead of pressing the enter key.
  • By inserting a backslash (\) character before pressing the enter key, escaping the newline.

The fish commandline editor works exactly the same in single line mode and in multiline mode. To move between lines use the left and right arrow keys and other such keyboard shortcuts.

Searchable command history

After a command has been executed, it is remembered in the history list. Any duplicate history items are automatically removed. By pressing the up and down keys, you can search forwards and backwards in the history. If the current command line is not empty when starting a history search, only the commands containing the string entered into the command line are shown.

By pressing alt-up () and alt-down (), a history search is also performed, but instead of searching for a complete commandline, each commandline is broken into separate elements just like it would be before execution, and the history is searched for an element matching that under the cursor.

For more complicated searches, you can press ctrl-r to open a pager that allows you to search the history. It shows a limited number of entries in one page, press ctrl-r [4] again to move to the next page and ctrl-s [5] to move to the previous page. You can change the text to refine your search.

History searches are case-insensitive unless the search string contains an uppercase character. You can stop a search to edit your search string by pressing escape or pagedown.

Prefixing the commandline with a space will prevent the entire line from being stored in the history. It will still be available for recall until the next command is executed, but will not be stored on disk. This is to allow you to fix misspellings and such.

The command history is stored in the file ~/.local/share/fish/fish_history (or $XDG_DATA_HOME/fish/fish_history if that variable is set) by default. However, you can set the fish_history environment variable to change the name of the history session (resulting in a <session>_history file); both before starting the shell and while the shell is running.

See the history command for other manipulations.

Examples:

To search for previous entries containing the word 'make', type make in the console and press the up key.

If the commandline reads cd m, place the cursor over the m character and press alt-up () to search for previously typed words containing 'm'.

[4]
Or another binding that triggers the history-pager input function. See bind for a list.
[5]
Or another binding that triggers the pager-toggle-search input function.

Private mode

Fish has a private mode, in which command history will not be written to the history file on disk. To enable it, either set $fish_private_mode to a non-empty value, or launch with fish --private (or fish -P for short).

If you launch fish with -P, it both hides old history and prevents writing history to disk. This is useful to avoid leaking personal information (e.g. for screencasts) or when dealing with sensitive information.

You can query the variable fish_private_mode (if test -n "$fish_private_mode" ...) if you would like to respect the user's wish for privacy and alter the behavior of your own fish scripts.

Navigating directories is usually done with the cd command, but fish offers some advanced features as well.

The current working directory can be displayed with the pwd command, or the $PWD special variable. Usually your prompt already does this.

Directory history

Fish automatically keeps a trail of the recent visited directories with cd by storing this history in the dirprev and dirnext variables.

Several commands are provided to interact with this directory history:

  • dirh prints the history
  • cdh displays a prompt to quickly navigate the history
  • prevd moves backward through the history. It is bound to alt-left ()
  • nextd moves forward through the history. It is bound to alt-right ()

Directory stack

Another set of commands, usually also available in other shells like bash, deal with the directory stack. Stack handling is not automatic and needs explicit calls of the following commands:

  • dirs prints the stack
  • pushd adds a directory on top of the stack and makes it the current working directory
  • popd removes the directory on top of the stack and changes the current working directory

The fish language

This document is a comprehensive overview of fish's scripting language.

For interactive features see Interactive use.

Syntax overview

Shells like fish are used by giving them commands. A command is executed by writing the name of the command followed by any arguments. For example:

echo hello world


echo command writes its arguments to the screen. In this example the output is hello world.

Everything in fish is done with commands. There are commands for repeating other commands, commands for assigning variables, commands for treating a group of commands as a single command, etc. All of these commands follow the same basic syntax.

Every program on your computer can be used as a command in fish. If the program file is located in one of the PATH directories, you can just type the name of the program to use it. Otherwise the whole filename, including the directory (like /home/me/code/checkers/checkers or ../checkers) is required.

Here is a list of some useful commands:

  • cd: Change the current directory
  • ls: List files and directories
  • man: Display a manual page - try man ls to get help on your "ls" command, or man mv to get information about "mv".
  • mv: Move (rename) files
  • cp: Copy files
  • open: Open files with the default application associated with each filetype
  • less: Display the contents of files

Commands and arguments are separated by the space character ' '. Every command ends with either a newline (by pressing the return key) or a semicolon ;. Multiple commands can be written on the same line by separating them with semicolons.

A switch is a very common special type of argument. Switches almost always start with one or more hyphens - and alter the way a command operates. For example, the ls command usually lists the names of all files and directories in the current working directory. By using the -l switch, the behavior of ls is changed to not only display the filename, but also the size, permissions, owner, and modification time of each file.

Switches differ between commands and are usually documented on a command's manual page. There are some switches, however, that are common to most commands. For example, --help will usually display a help text, --version will usually display the command version, and -i will often turn on interactive prompting before taking action. Try man your-command-here to get information on your command's switches.

So the basic idea of fish is the same as with other unix shells: It gets a commandline, runs expansions, and the result is then run as a command.

Terminology

Here we define some of the terms used on this page and throughout the rest of the fish documentation:

  • Argument: A parameter given to a command. In echo foo, the "foo" is an argument.
  • Builtin: A command that is implemented by the shell. Builtins are so closely tied to the operation of the shell that it is impossible to implement them as external commands. In echo foo, the "echo" is a builtin.
  • Command: A program that the shell can run, or more specifically an external program that the shell runs in another process. External commands are provided on your system, as executable files. In echo foo the "echo" is a builtin command, in command echo foo the "echo" is an external command, provided by a file like /bin/echo.
  • Function: A block of commands that can be called as if they were a single command. By using functions, it is possible to string together multiple simple commands into one more advanced command.
  • Job: A running pipeline or command.
  • Pipeline: A set of commands strung together so that the output of one command is the input of the next command. echo foo | grep foo is a pipeline.
  • Redirection: An operation that changes one of the input or output streams associated with a job.
  • Switch or Option: A special kind of argument that alters the behavior of a command. A switch almost always begins with one or two hyphens. In echo -n foo the "-n" is an option.

Quotes

Sometimes you want to give a command an argument that contains characters special to fish, like spaces or $ or *. To do that, you can use quotes:

rm "my file.txt"


to remove a file called my file.txt instead of trying to remove two files, my and file.txt.

Fish understands two kinds of quotes: Single (') and double ("), and both work slightly differently.

Between single quotes, fish performs no expansions. Between double quotes, fish only performs variable expansion and command substitution in the $(command). No other kind of expansion (including brace expansion or parameter expansion) is performed, and escape sequences (for example, \n) are ignored. Within quotes, whitespace is not used to separate arguments, allowing quoted arguments to contain spaces.

The only meaningful escape sequences in single quotes are \', which escapes a single quote and \\, which escapes the backslash symbol. The only meaningful escapes in double quotes are \", which escapes a double quote, \$, which escapes a dollar character, \ followed by a newline, which deletes the backslash and the newline, and \\, which escapes the backslash symbol.

Single quotes have no special meaning within double quotes and vice versa.

More examples:

grep 'enabled)$' foo.txt


searches for lines ending in enabled) in foo.txt (the $ is special to grep: it matches the end of the line).

apt install "postgres-*"


installs all packages with a name starting with "postgres-", instead of looking through the current directory for files named "postgres-something".

Escaping Characters

Some characters cannot be written directly on the command line. For these characters, so-called escape sequences are provided. These are:

  • \a represents the alert character.
  • \e represents the escape character.
  • \f represents the form feed character.
  • \n represents a newline character.
  • \r represents the carriage return character.
  • \t represents the tab character.
  • \v represents the vertical tab character.
  • \xHH or \XHH, where HH is a hexadecimal number, represents a byte of data with the specified value. For example, \x9 is the tab character. If you are using a multibyte encoding, this can be used to enter invalid strings. Typically fish is run with the ASCII or UTF-8 encoding, so anything up to \X7f is an ASCII character.
  • \ooo, where ooo is an octal number, represents the ASCII character with the specified value. For example, \011 is the tab character. The highest allowed value is \177.
  • \uXXXX, where XXXX is a hexadecimal number, represents the 16-bit Unicode character with the specified value. For example, \u9 is the tab character.
  • \UXXXXXXXX, where XXXXXXXX is a hexadecimal number, represents the 32-bit Unicode character with the specified value. For example, \U9 is the tab character. The highest allowed value is U10FFFF.
  • \cX, where X is a letter of the alphabet, represents the control sequence generated by pressing the control key and the specified letter. For example, \ci is the tab character

Some characters have special meaning to the shell. For example, an apostrophe ' disables expansion (see Quotes). To tell the shell to treat these characters literally, escape them with a backslash. For example, the command:

echo \'hello world\'


outputs 'hello world' (including the apostrophes), while the command:

echo 'hello world'


outputs hello world (without the apostrophes). In the former case the shell treats the apostrophes as literal ' characters, while in the latter case it treats them as special expansion modifiers.

The special characters and their escape sequences are:

  • (backslash space) escapes the space character. This keeps the shell from splitting arguments on the escaped space.
  • \$ escapes the dollar character.
  • \\ escapes the backslash character.
  • \* escapes the star character.
  • \? escapes the question mark character (this is not necessary if the qmark-noglob feature flag is enabled).
  • \~ escapes the tilde character.
  • \# escapes the hash character.
  • \( escapes the left parenthesis character.
  • \) escapes the right parenthesis character.
  • \{ escapes the left curly bracket character.
  • \} escapes the right curly bracket character.
  • \[ escapes the left bracket character.
  • \] escapes the right bracket character.
  • \< escapes the less than character.
  • \> escapes the more than character.
  • \& escapes the ampersand character.
  • \| escapes the vertical bar character.
  • \; escapes the semicolon character.
  • \" escapes the quote character.
  • \' escapes the apostrophe character.

As a special case, \ immediately followed by a literal new line is a "continuation" and tells fish to ignore the line break and resume input at the start of the next line (without introducing any whitespace or terminating a token).

Input/Output Redirection

Most programs use three input/output (I/O) streams:

  • Standard input (stdin) for reading. Defaults to reading from the keyboard.
  • Standard output (stdout) for writing output. Defaults to writing to the screen.
  • Standard error (stderr) for writing errors and warnings. Defaults to writing to the screen.

Each stream has a number called the file descriptor (FD): 0 for stdin, 1 for stdout, and 2 for stderr.

The destination of a stream can be changed using something called redirection. For example, echo hello > output.txt, redirects the standard output of the echo command to a text file.

  • To read standard input from a file, use <SOURCE_FILE.
  • To read standard input from a file or /dev/null if it can't be read, use <?SOURCE_FILE.
  • To write standard output to a file, use >DESTINATION.
  • To write standard error to a file, use 2>DESTINATION. [1]
  • To append standard output to a file, use >>DESTINATION_FILE.
  • To append standard error to a file, use 2>>DESTINATION_FILE.
  • To not overwrite ("clobber") an existing file, use >?DESTINATION or 2>?DESTINATION. This is known as the "noclobber" redirection.

DESTINATION can be one of the following:

  • A filename to write the output to. Often >/dev/null to silence output by writing it to the special "sinkhole" file.
  • An ampersand (&) followed by the number of another file descriptor like &2 for standard error. The output will be written to the destination descriptor.
  • An ampersand followed by a minus sign (&-). The file descriptor will be closed. Note: This may cause the program to fail because its writes will be unsuccessful.

As a convenience, the redirection &> can be used to direct both stdout and stderr to the same destination. For example, echo hello &> all_output.txt redirects both stdout and stderr to the file all_output.txt. This is equivalent to echo hello > all_output.txt 2>&1.

Any arbitrary file descriptor can be used in a redirection by prefixing the redirection with the FD number.

  • To redirect the input of descriptor N, use N<DESTINATION.
  • To redirect the output of descriptor N, use N>DESTINATION.
  • To append the output of descriptor N to a file, use N>>DESTINATION_FILE.

File descriptors cannot be used with a <? input redirection, only a regular < one.

For example:

# Write `foo`'s standard error (file descriptor 2)
# to a file called "output.stderr":
foo 2> output.stderr
# if $num doesn't contain a number,
# this test will be false and print an error,
# so by ignoring the error we can be sure that we're dealing
# with a number in the "if" block:
if test "$num" -gt 2 2>/dev/null

# do things with $num as a number greater than 2 else
# do things if $num is <= 2 or not a number end # Save `make`s output in a file: make &>/log # Redirections stack and can be used with blocks: begin
echo stdout
echo stderr >&2 # <- this goes to stderr! end >/dev/null # ignore stdout, so this prints "stderr" # print all lines that include "foo" from myfile, or nothing if it doesn't exist. string match '*foo*' <?myfile


It is an error to redirect a builtin, function, or block to a file descriptor above 2. However this is supported for external commands.

[1]
Previous versions of fish also allowed specifying this as ^DESTINATION, but that made another character special so it was deprecated and removed. See feature flags.

Piping

Another way to redirect streams is a pipe. A pipe connects streams with each other. Usually the standard output of one command is connected with the standard input of another. This is done by separating commands with the pipe character |. For example:

cat foo.txt | head


The command cat foo.txt sends the contents of foo.txt to stdout. This output is provided as input for the head program, which prints the first 10 lines of its input.

It is possible to pipe a different output file descriptor by prepending its FD number and the output redirect symbol to the pipe. For example:

make fish 2>| less


will attempt to build fish, and any errors will be shown using the less pager. [2]

As a convenience, the pipe &| redirects both stdout and stderr to the same process. This is different from bash, which uses |&.

[2]
A "pager" here is a program that takes output and "paginates" it. less doesn't just do pages, it allows arbitrary scrolling (even back!).

Combining pipes and redirections

It is possible to use multiple redirections and a pipe at the same time. In that case, they are read in this order:

1.
First the pipe is set up.
2.
Then the redirections are evaluated from left-to-right.

This is important when any redirections reference other file descriptors with the &N syntax. When you say >&2, that will redirect stdout to where stderr is pointing to at that time.

Consider this helper function:

# Just make a function that prints something to stdout and stderr
function print

echo out
echo err >&2 end


Now let's see a few cases:

# Redirect both stderr and stdout to less
print 2>&1 | less
# or
print &| less
# Show the "out" on stderr, silence the "err"
print >&2 2>/dev/null
# Silence both
print >/dev/null 2>&1


Job control

When you start a job in fish, fish itself will pause, and give control of the terminal to the program just started. Sometimes, you want to continue using the commandline, and have the job run in the background. To create a background job, append an & (ampersand) to your command. This will tell fish to run the job in the background. Background jobs are very useful when running programs that have a graphical user interface.

Example:

emacs &


will start the emacs text editor in the background. fg can be used to bring it into the foreground again when needed.

Most programs allow you to suspend the program's execution and return control to fish by pressing ctrl-z (also referred to as ^Z). Once back at the fish commandline, you can start other programs and do anything you want. If you then want you can go back to the suspended command by using the fg (foreground) command.

If you instead want to put a suspended job into the background, use the bg command.

To get a listing of all currently started jobs, use the jobs command. These listed jobs can be removed with the disown command.

At the moment, functions cannot be started in the background. Functions that are stopped and then restarted in the background using the bg command will not execute correctly.

If the & character is followed by a non-separating character, it is not interpreted as background operator. Separating characters are whitespace and the characters ;<>&|.

Functions

Functions are programs written in the fish syntax. They group together various commands and their arguments using a single name.

For example, here's a simple function to list directories:

function ll

ls -l $argv end


The first line tells fish to define a function by the name of ll, so it can be used by simply writing ll on the commandline. The second line tells fish that the command ls -l $argv should be called when ll is invoked. $argv is a list variable, which always contains all arguments sent to the function. In the example above, these are simply passed on to the ls command. The end on the third line ends the definition.

Calling this as ll /tmp/ will end up running ls -l /tmp/, which will list the contents of /tmp.

This is a kind of function known as an alias.

Fish's prompt is also defined in a function, called fish_prompt. It is run when the prompt is about to be displayed and its output forms the prompt:

function fish_prompt

# A simple prompt. Displays the current directory
# (which fish stores in the $PWD variable)
# and then a user symbol - a '►' for a normal user and a '#' for root.
set -l user_char '►'
if fish_is_root_user
set user_char '#'
end
echo (set_color yellow)$PWD (set_color purple)$user_char end


To edit a function, you can use funced, and to save a function funcsave. This will store it in a function file that fish will autoload when needed.

The functions builtin can show a function's current definition (and type will also do if given a function).

For more information on functions, see the documentation for the function builtin.

Defining aliases

One of the most common uses for functions is to slightly alter the behavior of an already existing command. For example, one might want to redefine the ls command to display colors. The switch for turning on colors on GNU systems is --color=auto. An alias around ls might look like this:

function ls

command ls --color=auto $argv end


There are a few important things that need to be noted about aliases:

  • Always take care to add the $argv variable to the list of parameters to the wrapped command. This makes sure that if the user specifies any additional parameters to the function, they are passed on to the underlying command.
  • If the alias has the same name as the aliased command, you need to prefix the call to the program with command to tell fish that the function should not call itself, but rather a command with the same name. If you forget to do so, the function would call itself until the end of time. Usually fish is smart enough to figure this out and will refrain from doing so (which is hopefully in your interest).

To easily create a function of this form, you can use the alias command. Unlike other shells, this just makes functions - fish has no separate concept of an "alias", we just use the word for a simple wrapping function like this. alias immediately creates a function. Consider using alias --save or funcsave to save the created function into an autoload file instead of recreating the alias each time.

For an alternative, try abbreviations. These are words that are expanded while you type, instead of being actual functions inside the shell.

Autoloading functions

Functions can be defined on the commandline or in a configuration file, but they can also be automatically loaded. This has some advantages:

  • An autoloaded function becomes available automatically to all running shells.
  • If the function definition is changed, all running shells will automatically reload the altered version, after a while.
  • Startup time and memory usage is improved, etc.

When fish needs to load a function, it searches through any directories in the list variable $fish_function_path for a file with a name consisting of the name of the function plus the suffix .fish and loads the first it finds.

For example if you try to execute something called banana, fish will go through all directories in $fish_function_path looking for a file called banana.fish and load the first one it finds.

By default $fish_function_path contains the following:

  • A directory for users to keep their own functions, usually ~/.config/fish/functions (controlled by the XDG_CONFIG_HOME environment variable).
  • A directory for functions for all users on the system, usually /etc/fish/functions (really $__fish_sysconfdir/functions).
  • Directories for other software to put their own functions. These are in the directories under $__fish_user_data_dir (usually ~/.local/share/fish, controlled by the XDG_DATA_HOME environment variable) and in the XDG_DATA_DIRS environment variable, in a subdirectory called fish/vendor_functions.d. The default value for XDG_DATA_DIRS is usually /usr/share/fish/vendor_functions.d and /usr/local/share/fish/vendor_functions.d.
  • The functions shipped with fish, usually installed in /usr/share/fish/functions (really $__fish_data_dir/functions).

If you are unsure, your functions probably belong in ~/.config/fish/functions.

As we've explained, autoload files are loaded by name, so, while you can put multiple functions into one file, the file will only be loaded automatically once you try to execute the one that shares the name.

Autoloading also won't work for event handlers, since fish cannot know that a function is supposed to be executed when an event occurs when it hasn't yet loaded the function. See the event handlers section for more information.

If a file of the right name doesn't define the function, fish will not read other autoload files, instead it will go on to try builtins and finally commands. This allows masking a function defined later in $fish_function_path, e.g. if your administrator has put something into /etc/fish/functions that you want to skip.

If you are developing another program and want to install fish functions for it, install them to the "vendor" functions directory. As this path varies from system to system, you can use pkgconfig to discover it with the output of pkg-config --variable functionsdir fish. Your installation system should support a custom path to override the pkgconfig path, as other distributors may need to alter it easily.

Comments

Anything after a # until the end of the line is a comment. That means it's purely for the reader's benefit, fish ignores it.

This is useful to explain what and why you are doing something:

function ls

# The function is called ls,
# so we have to explicitly call `command ls` to avoid calling ourselves.
command ls --color=auto $argv end


There are no multiline comments. If you want to make a comment span multiple lines, simply start each line with a #.

Comments can also appear after a line like so:

set -gx EDITOR emacs # I don't like vim.


Conditions

Fish has some builtins that let you execute commands only if a specific criterion is met: if, switch, and and or, and also the familiar &&/|| syntax.

The if statement

The if statement runs a block of commands if the condition was true.

Like other shells, but unlike typical programming languages you might know, the condition here is a command. Fish runs it, and if it returns a true exit status (that's 0), the if-block is run. For example:

if test -e /etc/os-release

cat /etc/os-release end


This uses the test command to see if the file /etc/os-release exists. If it does, it runs cat, which prints it on the screen.

Unlike other shells, the condition command just ends after the first job, there is no then here. Combiners like and and or extend the condition.

A more complicated example with a command substitution:

if test "$(uname)" = Linux

echo I like penguins end


Because test can be used for many different tests, it is important to quote variables and command substitutions. If the $(uname) was not quoted, and uname printed nothing it would run test = Linux, which is an error.

if can also take else if clauses with additional conditions and an else clause that is executed when everything else was false:

if test "$number" -gt 10

echo Your number was greater than 10 else if test "$number" -gt 5
echo Your number was greater than 5 else if test "$number" -gt 1
echo Your number was greater than 1 else
echo Your number was smaller or equal to 1 end


The not keyword can be used to invert the status:

# Just see if the file contains the string "fish" anywhere.
# This executes the `grep` command, which searches for a string,
# and if it finds it returns a status of 0.
# The `not` then turns 0 into 1 or anything else into 0.
# The `-q` switch stops it from printing any matches.
if not grep -q fish myanimals

echo "You don't have fish!" else
echo "You have fish!" end


Other things commonly used in if-conditions:

  • contains - to see if a list contains a specific element (if contains -- /usr/bin $PATH)
  • string - to e.g. match strings (if string match -q -- '*-' $arg)
  • path - to check if paths of some criteria exist (if path is -rf -- ~/.config/fish/config.fish)
  • type - to see if a command, function or builtin exists (if type -q git)

The switch statement

The switch command is used to execute one of possibly many blocks of commands depending on the value of a string. It can take multiple case blocks that are executed when the string matches. They can take wildcards. For example:

switch (uname)
case Linux

echo Hi Tux! case Darwin
echo Hi Hexley! case DragonFly '*BSD'
echo Hi Beastie! # this also works for FreeBSD and NetBSD case '*'
echo Hi, stranger! end


Unlike other shells or programming languages, there is no fallthrough - the first matching case block is executed and then control jumps out of the switch.

Combiners (and / or / && / ||)

For simple checks, you can use combiners. and or && run the second command if the first succeeded, while or or || run it if the first failed. For example:

# $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is a standard place to store configuration.
# If it's not set applications should use ~/.config.
set -q XDG_CONFIG_HOME; and set -l configdir $XDG_CONFIG_HOME
or set -l configdir ~/.config


Note that combiners are lazy - only the part that is necessary to determine the final status is run.

Compare:

if sleep 2; and false

echo 'How did I get here? This should be impossible' end


and:

if false; and sleep 2

echo 'How did I get here? This should be impossible' end


These do essentially the same thing, but the former takes 2 seconds longer because the sleep always needs to run.

Or you can have a case where it is necessary to stop early:

if command -sq foo; and foo


If this went on after seeing that the command "foo" doesn't exist, it would try to run foo and error because it wasn't found!

Combiners really just execute step-by-step, so it isn't recommended to build longer chains of them because they might do something you don't want. Consider:

test -e /etc/my.config
or echo "OH NO WE NEED A CONFIG FILE"
and return 1


This will execute return 1 also if the test succeeded. This is because fish runs test -e /etc/my.config, sets $status to 0, then skips the echo, keeps $status at 0, and then executes the return 1 because $status is still 0.

So if you have more complex conditions or want to run multiple things after something failed, consider using an if. Here that would be:

if not test -e /etc/my.config

echo "OH NO WE NEED A CONFIG FILE"
return 1 end


Loops and blocks

Like most programming language, fish also has the familiar while and for loops.

while works like a repeated if:

while true

echo Still running
sleep 1 end


will print "Still running" once a second. You can abort it with ctrl-c.

for loops work like in other shells, which is more like python's for-loops than e.g. C's:

for file in *

echo file: $file end


will print each file in the current directory. The part after the in is just a list of arguments, so you can use any expansions there:

set moreanimals bird fox
for animal in {cat,}fish dog $moreanimals

echo I like the $animal end


If you need a list of numbers, you can use the seq command to create one:

for i in (seq 1 5)

echo $i end


break is available to break out of a loop, and continue to jump to the next iteration.

Input and output redirections (including pipes) can also be applied to loops:

while read -l line

echo line: $line end < file


In addition there's a begin block that just groups commands together so you can redirect to a block or use a new variable scope without any repetition:

begin

set -l foo bar # this variable will only be available in this block! end


Parameter expansion

When fish is given a commandline, it expands the parameters before sending them to the command. There are multiple different kinds of expansions:

  • Wildcards, to create filenames from patterns - *.jpg
  • Variable expansion, to use the value of a variable - $HOME
  • Command substitution, to use the output of another command - $(cat /path/to/file)
  • Brace expansion, to write lists with common pre- or suffixes in a shorter way {/usr,}/bin
  • Tilde expansion, to turn the ~ at the beginning of paths into the path to the home directory ~/bin

Parameter expansion is limited to 524288 items. There is a limit to how many arguments the operating system allows for any command, and 524288 is far above it. This is a measure to stop the shell from hanging doing useless computation.

Wildcards ("Globbing")

When a parameter includes an unquoted * star (or "asterisk") or a ? question mark, fish uses it as a wildcard to match files.

  • * matches any number of characters (including zero) in a file name, not including /.
  • ** matches any number of characters (including zero), and also descends into subdirectories. If ** is a segment by itself, that segment may match zero times, for compatibility with other shells.
  • ? can match any single character except /. This is deprecated and can be disabled via the qmark-noglob feature flag, so ? will just be an ordinary character.

Wildcard matches are sorted case insensitively. When sorting matches containing numbers, they are naturally sorted, so that the strings '1' '5' and '12' would be sorted like 1, 5, 12.

Hidden files (where the name begins with a dot) are not considered when wildcarding unless the wildcard string has a dot in that place.

Examples:

  • a* matches any files beginning with an 'a' in the current directory.
  • ** matches any files and directories in the current directory and all of its subdirectories.
  • ~/.* matches all hidden files (also known as "dotfiles") and directories in your home directory.

For most commands, if any wildcard fails to expand, the command is not executed, $status is set to nonzero, and a warning is printed. This behavior is like what bash does with shopt -s failglob. There are exceptions, namely set and path, overriding variables in overrides, count and for. Their globs will instead expand to zero arguments (so the command won't see them at all), like with shopt -s nullglob in bash.

Examples:

# List the .foo files, or warns if there aren't any.
ls *.foo
# List the .foo files, if any.
set foos *.foo
if count $foos >/dev/null

ls $foos end


Unlike bash (by default), fish will not pass on the literal glob character if no match was found, so for a command like apt install that does the matching itself, you need to add quotes:

apt install "ncurses-*"


Variable expansion

One of the most important expansions in fish is the "variable expansion". This is the replacing of a dollar sign ($) followed by a variable name with the _value_ of that variable.

In the simplest case, this is just something like:

echo $HOME


which will replace $HOME with the home directory of the current user, and pass it to echo, which will then print it.

Some variables like $HOME are already set because fish sets them by default or because fish's parent process passed them to fish when it started it. You can define your own variables by setting them with set:

set my_directory /home/cooluser/mystuff
ls $my_directory
# shows the contents of /home/cooluser/mystuff


For more on how setting variables works, see Shell variables and the following sections.

Sometimes a variable has no value because it is undefined or empty, and it expands to nothing:

echo $nonexistentvariable
# Prints no output.


To separate a variable name from text you can encase the variable within double-quotes or braces:

set WORD cat
echo The plural of $WORD is "$WORD"s
# Prints "The plural of cat is cats" because $WORD is set to "cat".
echo The plural of $WORD is {$WORD}s
# ditto


Without the quotes or braces, fish will try to expand a variable called $WORDs, which may not exist.

The latter syntax {$WORD} is a special case of brace expansion.

If $WORD here is undefined or an empty list, the "s" is not printed. However, it is printed if $WORD is the empty string (like after set WORD "").

For more on shell variables, read the Shell variables section.

Quoting variables

Variable expansion also happens in double quoted strings. Inside double quotes ("these"), variables will always expand to exactly one argument. If they are empty or undefined, it will result in an empty string. If they have one element, they'll expand to that element. If they have more than that, the elements will be joined with spaces, unless the variable is a path variable - in that case it will use a colon (:) instead [3].

Fish variables are all lists, and they are split into elements when they are set - that means it is important to decide whether to use quotes or not with set:

set foo 1 2 3 # a variable with three elements
rm $foo # runs the equivalent of `rm 1 2 3` - trying to delete three files: 1, 2 and 3.
rm "$foo" # runs `rm '1 2 3'` - trying to delete one file called '1 2 3'
set foo # an empty variable
rm $foo # runs `rm` without arguments
rm "$foo" # runs the equivalent of `rm ''`
set foo "1 2 3"
rm $foo # runs the equivalent of `rm '1 2 3'` - trying to delete one file
rm "$foo" # same thing


This is unlike other shells, which do what is known as "Word Splitting", where they split the variable when it is used in an expansion. E.g. in bash:

foo="1 2 3"
rm $foo # runs the equivalent of `rm 1 2 3`
rm "$foo" # runs the equivalent of `rm '1 2 3'`


This is the cause of very common problems with filenames with spaces in bash scripts.

In fish, unquoted variables will expand to as many arguments as they have elements. That means an empty list will expand to nothing, a variable with one element will expand to that element, and a variable with multiple elements will expand to each of those elements separately.

If a variable expands to nothing, it will cancel out any other strings attached to it. See the Combining Lists section for more information.

Most of the time, not quoting a variable is correct. The exception is when you need to ensure that the variable is passed as one element, even if it might be unset or have multiple elements. This happens often with test:

set -l foo one two three
test -n $foo
# prints an error that it got too many arguments, because it was executed like
test -n one two three
test -n "$foo"
# works, because it was executed like
test -n "one two three"


[3]
Unlike bash or zsh, which will join with the first character of $IFS (which usually is space).

Dereferencing variables

The $ symbol can also be used multiple times, as a kind of "dereference" operator (the * in C or C++), like in the following code:

set foo a b c
set a 10; set b 20; set c 30
for i in (seq (count $$foo))

echo $$foo[$i] end # Output is: # 10 # 20 # 30


$$foo[$i] is "the value of the variable named by $foo[$i]".

This can also be used to give a variable name to a function:

function print_var

for arg in $argv
echo Variable $arg is $$arg
end end set -g foo 1 2 3 set -g bar a b c print_var foo bar # prints "Variable foo is 1 2 3" and "Variable bar is a b c"


Of course the variable will have to be accessible from the function, so it needs to be global/universal or exported. It also can't clash with a variable name used inside the function. So if we had made $foo there a local variable, or if we had named it "arg" instead, it would not have worked.

When using this feature together with slices, the slices will be used from the inside out. $$foo[5] will use the fifth element of $foo as a variable name, instead of giving the fifth element of all the variables $foo refers to. That would instead be expressed as $$foo[1..-1][5] (take all elements of $foo, use them as variable names, then give the fifth element of those).

Some more examples:

set listone 1 2 3
set listtwo 4 5 6
set var listone listtwo
echo $$var
# Output is 1 2 3 4 5 6
echo $$var[1]
# Output is 1 2 3
echo $$var[2][3]
# $var[1] is listtwo, third element of that is 6, output is 6
echo $$var[..][2]
# The second element of every variable, so output is
# 2 5


Variables as command

Like other shells, you can run the value of a variable as a command.

> set -g EDITOR emacs
> $EDITOR foo # opens emacs, possibly the GUI version


If you want to give the command an argument inside the variable it needs to be a separate element:

> set EDITOR emacs -nw
> $EDITOR foo # opens emacs in the terminal even if the GUI is installed
> set EDITOR "emacs -nw"
> $EDITOR foo # tries to find a command called "emacs -nw"


Also like other shells, this only works with commands, builtins and functions - it will not work with keywords because they have syntactical importance.

For instance set if $if won't allow you to make an if-block, and set cmd command won't allow you to use the command decorator, but only uses like $cmd -q foo.

Command substitution

A command substitution is an expansion that uses the output of a command as the arguments to another. For example:

echo $(pwd)


This executes the pwd command, takes its output (more specifically what it wrote to the standard output "stdout" stream) and uses it as arguments to echo. So the inner command (the pwd) is run first and has to complete before the outer command can even be started.

If the inner command prints multiple lines, fish will use each separate line as a separate argument to the outer command. Unlike other shells, the value of $IFS is not used [4], fish splits on newlines.

Command substitutions can also be double-quoted:

echo "$(pwd)"


When using double quotes, the command output is not split up by lines, but trailing empty lines are still removed.

If the output is piped to string split or string split0 as the last step, those splits are used as they appear instead of splitting lines.

Fish also allows spelling command substitutions without the dollar, like echo (pwd). This variant will not be expanded in double-quotes (echo "(pwd)" will print (pwd)).

The exit status of the last run command substitution is available in the status variable if the substitution happens in the context of a set command (so if set -l (something) checks if something returned true).

To use only some lines of the output, refer to slices.

Examples:

# Outputs 'image.png'.
echo (basename image.jpg .jpg).png
# Convert all JPEG files in the current directory to the
# PNG format using the 'convert' program.
for i in *.jpg; convert $i (basename $i .jpg).png; end
# Set the ``data`` variable to the contents of 'data.txt'
# without splitting it into a list.
set data "$(cat data.txt)"
# Set ``$data`` to the contents of data, splitting on NUL-bytes.
set data (cat data | string split0)


Sometimes you want to pass the output of a command to another command that only accepts files. If it's just one file, you can usually just pass it via a pipe, like:

grep fish myanimallist1 | wc -l


but if you need multiple or the command doesn't read from standard input, "process substitution" is useful. Other shells allow this via foo <(bar) <(baz), and fish uses the psub command:

# Compare just the lines containing "fish" in two files:
diff -u (grep fish myanimallist1 | psub) (grep fish myanimallist2 | psub)


This creates a temporary file, stores the output of the command in that file and prints the filename, so it is given to the outer command.

Fish has a default limit of 100 MiB on the data it will read in a command sustitution. If that limit is reached the command (all of it, not just the command substitution - the outer command won't be executed at all) fails and $status is set to 122. This is so command substitutions can't cause the system to go out of memory, because typically your operating system has a much lower limit, so reading more than that would be useless and harmful. This limit can be adjusted with the fish_read_limit variable (0 meaning no limit). This limit also affects the read command.

[4]
One exception: Setting $IFS to empty will disable line splitting. This is deprecated, use string split instead.

Brace expansion

Curly braces can be used to write comma-separated lists. They will be expanded with each element becoming a new parameter, with the surrounding string attached. This is useful to save on typing, and to separate a variable name from surrounding text.

Examples:

> echo input.{c,h,txt}
input.c input.h input.txt
# Move all files with the suffix '.c' or '.h' to the subdirectory src.
> mv *.{c,h} src/
# Make a copy of `file` at `file.bak`.
> cp file{,.bak}
> set -l dogs hot cool cute "good "
> echo {$dogs}dog
hotdog cooldog cutedog good dog


If there is no "," or variable expansion between the curly braces, they will not be expanded:

# This {} isn't special
> echo foo-{}
foo-{}
# This passes "HEAD@{2}" to git
> git reset --hard HEAD@{2}
> echo {{a,b}}
{a} {b} # because the inner brace pair is expanded, but the outer isn't.


If after expansion there is nothing between the braces, the argument will be removed (see the Combining Lists section):

> echo foo-{$undefinedvar}
# Output is an empty line, just like a bare `echo`.


If there is nothing between a brace and a comma or two commas, it's interpreted as an empty element:

> echo {,,/usr}/bin
/bin /bin /usr/bin


To use a "," as an element, quote or escape it.

Combining lists

Fish expands lists like brace expansions:

>_ set -l foo x y z
>_ echo 1$foo
# Any element of $foo is combined with the "1":
1x 1y 1z
>_ echo {good,bad}" apples"
# Any element of the {} is combined with the " apples":
good apples bad apples
# Or we can mix the two:
>_ echo {good,bad}" "$foo
good x bad x good y bad y good z bad z


Any string attached to a list will be concatenated to each element.

Two lists will be expanded in all combinations - every element of the first with every element of the second:

>_ set -l a x y z; set -l b 1 2 3
>_ echo $a$b # same as {x,y,z}{1,2,3}
x1 y1 z1 x2 y2 z2 x3 y3 z3


A result of this is that, if a list has no elements, this combines the string with no elements, which means the entire token is removed!

>_ set -l c # <- this list is empty!
>_ echo {$c}word
# Output is an empty line - the "word" part is gone


This can be quite useful. For example, if you want to go through all the files in all the directories in PATH, use

for file in $PATH/*


Because PATH is a list, this expands to all the files in all the directories in it. And if there are no directories in PATH, the right answer here is to expand to no files.

Sometimes this may be unwanted, especially that tokens can disappear after expansion. In those cases, you should double-quote variables - echo "$c"word.

This also happens after command substitution. To avoid tokens disappearing there, make the inner command return a trailing newline, or double-quote it:

>_ set b 1 2 3
>_ echo (echo x)$b
x1 x2 x3
>_ echo (printf '%s' '')banana
# the printf prints nothing, so this is nothing times "banana",
# which is nothing.
>_ echo (printf '%s\n' '')banana
# the printf prints a newline,
# so the command substitution expands to an empty string,
# so this is `''banana`
banana
>_ echo "$(printf '%s' '')"banana
# quotes mean this is one argument, the banana stays


Slices

Sometimes it's necessary to access only some of the elements of a list (all fish variables are lists), or some of the lines a command substitution outputs. Both are possible in fish by writing a set of indices in brackets, like:

# Make $var a list of four elements
set var one two three four
# Print the second:
echo $var[2]
# prints "two"
# or print the first three:
echo $var[1..3]
# prints "one two three"


In index brackets, fish understands ranges written like a..b ('a' and 'b' being indices). They are expanded into a sequence of indices from a to b (so a a+1 a+2 ... b), going up if b is larger and going down if a is larger. Negative indices can also be used - they are taken from the end of the list, so -1 is the last element, and -2 the one before it. If an index doesn't exist the range is clamped to the next possible index.

If a list has 5 elements the indices go from 1 to 5, so a range of 2..16 will only go from element 2 to element 5.

If the end is negative the range always goes up, so 2..-2 will go from element 2 to 4, and 2..-16 won't go anywhere because there is no way to go from the second element to one that doesn't exist, while going up. If the start is negative the range always goes down, so -2..1 will go from element 4 to 1, and -16..2 won't go anywhere because there is no way to go from an element that doesn't exist to the second element, while going down.

A missing starting index in a range defaults to 1. This is allowed if the range is the first index expression of the sequence. Similarly, a missing ending index, defaulting to -1 is allowed for the last index in the sequence.

Multiple ranges are also possible, separated with a space.

Some examples:

echo (seq 10)[1 2 3]
# Prints: 1 2 3
# Limit the command substitution output
echo (seq 10)[2..5]
# Uses elements from 2 to 5
# Output is: 2 3 4 5
echo (seq 10)[7..]
# Prints: 7 8 9 10
# Use overlapping ranges:
echo (seq 10)[2..5 1..3]
# Takes elements from 2 to 5 and then elements from 1 to 3
# Output is: 2 3 4 5 1 2 3
# Reverse output
echo (seq 10)[-1..1]
# Uses elements from the last output line to
# the first one in reverse direction
# Output is: 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
# The command substitution has only one line,
# so these will result in empty output:
echo (echo one)[2..-1]
echo (echo one)[-3..1]


The same works when setting or expanding variables:

# Reverse path variable
set PATH $PATH[-1..1]
# or
set PATH[-1..1] $PATH
# Use only n last items of the PATH
set n -3
echo $PATH[$n..-1]


Variables can be used as indices for expansion of variables, like so:

set index 2
set letters a b c d
echo $letters[$index] # returns 'b'


However using variables as indices for command substitution is currently not supported, so:

echo (seq 5)[$index] # This won't work
set sequence (seq 5) # It needs to be written on two lines like this.
echo $sequence[$index] # returns '2'


When using indirect variable expansion with multiple $ ($$name), you have to give all indices up to the variable you want to slice:

> set -l list 1 2 3 4 5
> set -l name list
> echo $$name[1]
1 2 3 4 5
> echo $$name[1..-1][1..3] # or $$name[1][1..3], since $name only has one element.
1 2 3


Home directory expansion

The ~ (tilde) character at the beginning of a parameter, followed by a username, is expanded into the home directory of the specified user. A lone ~, or a ~ followed by a slash, is expanded into the home directory of the process owner:

ls ~/Music # lists my music directory
echo ~root # prints root's home directory, probably "/root"


Combining different expansions

All of the above expansions can be combined. If several expansions result in more than one parameter, all possible combinations are created.

When combining multiple parameter expansions, expansions are performed in the following order:

  • Command substitutions
  • Variable expansions
  • Bracket expansion
  • Wildcard expansion

Expansions are performed from right to left, nested bracket expansions and command substitutions are performed from the inside and out.

Example:

If the current directory contains the files 'foo' and 'bar', the command echo a(ls){1,2,3} will output abar1 abar2 abar3 afoo1 afoo2 afoo3.

Table Of Operators

Putting it together, here is a quick reference to fish's operators, all of the special symbols it uses:

Symbol Meaning Example
$ Variable expansion echo $foo
$() and () Command substitution cat (grep foo bar) or cat $(grep foo bar)
< and > Redirection, like command > file git shortlog -nse . > authors
| Pipe, connect two or more commands foo | grep bar | grep baz
; End of the command, instead of a newline command1; command2
& Backgrounding sleep 5m &
{} Brace expansion ls {/usr,}/bin
&& and || Combiners mkdir foo && cd foo or rm foo || exit
* and ** Wildcards cat *.fish or count **.jpg
\\ Escaping echo foo\nbar or echo \$foo
'' and "" Quoting rm "file with spaces" or echo '$foo'
~ Home directory expansion ls ~/ or ls ~root/
# Comments echo Hello # this isn't printed

Shell variables

Variables are a way to save data and pass it around. They can be used just by the shell, or they can be "exported", so that a copy of the variable is available to any external command the shell starts. An exported variable is referred to as an "environment variable".

To set a variable value, use the set command. A variable name can not be empty and can contain only letters, digits, and underscores. It may begin and end with any of those characters.

Example:

To set the variable smurf_color to the value blue, use the command set smurf_color blue.

After a variable has been set, you can use the value of a variable in the shell through variable expansion.

Example:

set smurf_color blue
echo Smurfs are usually $smurf_color
set pants_color red
echo Papa smurf, who is $smurf_color, wears $pants_color pants


So you set a variable with set, and use it with a $ and the name.

Variable Scope

All variables in fish have a scope. For example they can be global or local to a function or block:

# This variable is global, we can use it everywhere.
set --global name Patrick
# This variable is local, it will not be visible in a function we call from here.
set --local place "at the Krusty Krab"
function local

# This can find $name, but not $place
echo Hello this is $name $place
# This variable is local, it will not be available
# outside of this function
set --local instrument mayonnaise
echo My favorite instrument is $instrument
# This creates a local $name, and won't touch the global one
set --local name Spongebob
echo My best friend is $name end local # Will print: # Hello this is Patrick # My favorite instrument is mayonnaise # My best friend is Spongebob echo $name, I am $place and my instrument is $instrument # Will print: # Patrick, I am at the Krusty Krab and my instrument is


There are four kinds of variable scopes in fish: universal, global, function and local variables.

  • Universal variables are shared between all fish sessions a user is running on one computer. They are stored on disk and persist even after reboot.
  • Global variables are specific to the current fish session. They can be erased by explicitly requesting set -e.
  • Function variables are specific to the currently executing function. They are erased ("go out of scope") when the current function ends. Outside of a function, they don't go out of scope.
  • Local variables are specific to the current block of commands, and automatically erased when a specific block goes out of scope. A block of commands is a series of commands that begins with one of the commands for, while , if, function, begin or switch, and ends with the command end. Outside of a block, this is the same as the function scope.

Variables can be explicitly set to be universal with the -U or --universal switch, global with -g or --global, function-scoped with -f or --function and local to the current block with -l or --local. The scoping rules when creating or updating a variable are:

  • When a scope is explicitly given, it will be used. If a variable of the same name exists in a different scope, that variable will not be changed.
  • When no scope is given, but a variable of that name exists, the variable of the smallest scope will be modified. The scope will not be changed.
  • When no scope is given and no variable of that name exists, the variable is created in function scope if inside a function, or global scope if no function is executing.

There can be many variables with the same name, but different scopes. When you use a variable, the smallest scoped variable of that name will be used. If a local variable exists, it will be used instead of the global or universal variable of the same name.

Example:

There are a few possible uses for different scopes.

Typically inside functions you should use local scope:

function something

set -l file /path/to/my/file
if not test -e "$file"
set file /path/to/my/otherfile
end end # or function something
if test -e /path/to/my/file
set -f file /path/to/my/file
else
set -f file /path/to/my/otherfile
end end


If you want to set something in config.fish, or set something in a function and have it available for the rest of the session, global scope is a good choice:

# Don't shorten the working directory in the prompt
set -g fish_prompt_pwd_dir_length 0
# Set my preferred cursor style:
function setcursors

set -g fish_cursor_default block
set -g fish_cursor_insert line
set -g fish_cursor_visual underscore end # Set my language set -gx LANG de_DE.UTF-8


If you want to set some personal customization, universal variables are nice:

# Typically you'd run this interactively, fish takes care of keeping it.
set -U fish_color_autosuggestion 555


Here is an example of local vs function-scoped variables:

function test-scopes

begin
# This is a nice local scope where all variables will die
set -l pirate 'There be treasure in them thar hills'
set -f captain Space, the final frontier
# If no variable of that name was defined, it is function-local.
set gnu "In the beginning there was nothing, which exploded"
end
# This will not output anything, since the pirate was local
echo $pirate
# This will output the good Captain's speech
# since $captain had function-scope.
echo $captain
# This will output Sir Terry's wisdom.
echo $gnu end


When a function calls another, local variables aren't visible:

function shiver

set phrase 'Shiver me timbers' end function avast
set --local phrase 'Avast, mateys'
# Calling the shiver function here can not
# change any variables in the local scope
# so phrase remains as we set it here.
shiver
echo $phrase end avast # Outputs "Avast, mateys"


When in doubt, use function-scoped variables. When you need to make a variable accessible everywhere, make it global. When you need to persistently store configuration, make it universal. When you want to use a variable only in a short block, make it local.

Overriding variables for a single command

If you want to override a variable for a single command, you can use "var=val" statements before the command:

# Call git status on another directory
# (can also be done via `git -C somerepo status`)
GIT_DIR=somerepo git status


Unlike other shells, fish will first set the variable and then perform other expansions on the line, so:

set foo banana
foo=gagaga echo $foo
# prints gagaga, while in other shells it might print "banana"


Multiple elements can be given in a brace expansion:

# Call bash with a reasonable default path.
PATH={/usr,}/{s,}bin bash


Or with a glob:

# Run vlc on all mp3 files in the current directory
# If no file exists it will still be run with no arguments
mp3s=*.mp3 vlc $mp3s


Unlike other shells, this does not inhibit any lookup (aliases or similar). Calling a command after setting a variable override will result in the exact same command being run.

This syntax is supported since fish 3.1.

Universal Variables

Universal variables are variables that are shared between all the user's fish sessions on the computer. Fish stores many of its configuration options as universal variables. This means that in order to change fish settings, all you have to do is change the variable value once, and it will be automatically updated for all sessions, and preserved across computer reboots and login/logout.

To see universal variables in action, start two fish sessions side by side, and issue the following command in one of them set fish_color_cwd blue. Since fish_color_cwd is a universal variable, the color of the current working directory listing in the prompt will instantly change to blue on both terminals.

Universal variables are stored in the file .config/fish/fish_variables. Do not edit this file directly, as your edits may be overwritten. Edit the variables through fish scripts or by using fish interactively instead.

Do not append to universal variables in config.fish, because these variables will then get longer with each new shell instance. Instead, simply set them once at the command line.

Exporting variables

Variables in fish can be exported, so they will be inherited by any commands started by fish. In particular, this is necessary for variables used to configure external commands like PAGER or GOPATH, but also for variables that contain general system settings like PATH or LANGUAGE. If an external command needs to know a variable, it needs to be exported. Exported variables are also often called "environment variables".

This also applies to fish - when it starts up, it receives environment variables from its parent (usually the terminal). These typically include system configuration like PATH and locale variables.

Variables can be explicitly set to be exported with the -x or --export switch, or not exported with the -u or --unexport switch. The exporting rules when setting a variable are similar to the scoping rules for variables - when an option is passed it is respected, otherwise the variable's existing state is used. If no option is passed and the variable didn't exist yet it is not exported.

As a naming convention, exported variables are in uppercase and unexported variables are in lowercase.

For example:

set -gx ANDROID_HOME ~/.android # /opt/android-sdk
set -gx CDPATH . ~ (test -e ~/Videos; and echo ~/Videos)
set -gx EDITOR emacs -nw
set -gx GOPATH ~/dev/go
set -gx GTK2_RC_FILES "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/gtk-2.0/gtkrc"
set -gx LESSHISTFILE "-"


Note: Exporting is not a scope, but an additional state. It typically makes sense to make exported variables global as well, but local-exported variables can be useful if you need something more specific than Overrides. They are copied to functions so the function can't alter them outside, and still available to commands. Global variables are accessible to functions whether they are exported or not.

Lists

Fish can store a list (or an "array" if you wish) of multiple strings inside of a variable:

> set mylist first second third
> printf '%s\n' $mylist # prints each element on its own line
first
second
third


To access one element of a list, use the index of the element inside of square brackets, like this:

echo $PATH[3]


List indices start at 1 in fish, not 0 like in other languages. This is because it requires less subtracting of 1 and many common Unix tools like seq work better with it (seq 5 prints 1 to 5, not 0 to 5). An invalid index is silently ignored resulting in no value (not even an empty string, just no argument at all).

If you don't use any brackets, all the elements of the list will be passed to the command as separate items. This means you can iterate over a list with for:

for i in $PATH

echo $i is in the path end


This goes over every directory in PATH separately and prints a line saying it is in the path.

To create a variable smurf, containing the items blue and small, simply write:

set smurf blue small


It is also possible to set or erase individual elements of a list:

# Set smurf to be a list with the elements 'blue' and 'small'
set smurf blue small
# Change the second element of smurf to 'evil'
set smurf[2] evil
# Erase the first element
set -e smurf[1]
# Output 'evil'
echo $smurf


If you specify a negative index when expanding or assigning to a list variable, the index will be taken from the end of the list. For example, the index -1 is the last element of the list:

> set fruit apple orange banana
> echo $fruit[-1]
banana
> echo $fruit[-2..-1]
orange
banana
> echo $fruit[-1..1] # reverses the list
banana
orange
apple


As you see, you can use a range of indices, see slices for details.

All lists are one-dimensional and can't contain other lists, although it is possible to fake nested lists using dereferencing - see variable expansion.

When a list is exported as an environment variable, it is either space or colon delimited, depending on whether it is a path variable:

> set -x smurf blue small
> set -x smurf_PATH forest mushroom
> env | grep smurf
smurf=blue small
smurf_PATH=forest:mushroom


Fish automatically creates lists from all environment variables whose name ends in PATH (like PATH, CDPATH or MANPATH), by splitting them on colons. Other variables are not automatically split.

Lists can be inspected with the count or the contains commands:

> count $smurf
2
> contains blue $smurf
# blue was found, so it exits with status 0
# (without printing anything)
> echo $status
0
> contains -i blue $smurf
1


A nice thing about lists is that they are passed to commands one element as one argument, so once you've set your list, you can just pass it:

set -l grep_args -r "my string"
grep $grep_args . # will run the same as `grep -r "my string"` .


Unlike other shells, fish does not do "word splitting" - elements in a list stay as they are, even if they contain spaces or tabs.

Argument Handling

An important list is $argv, which contains the arguments to a function or script. For example:

function myfunction

echo $argv[1]
echo $argv[3] end


This function takes whatever arguments it gets and prints the first and third:

> myfunction first second third
first
third
> myfunction apple cucumber banana
apple
banana


That covers the positional arguments, but commandline tools often get various options and flags, and $argv would contain them intermingled with the positional arguments. Typical unix argument handling allows short options (-h, also grouped like in ls -lah), long options (--help) and allows those options to take arguments (--color=auto or --position anywhere or complete -C"git ") as well as a -- separator to signal the end of options. Handling all of these manually is tricky and error-prone.

A more robust approach to option handling is argparse, which checks the defined options and puts them into various variables, leaving only the positional arguments in $argv. Here's a simple example:

function mybetterfunction

# We tell argparse about -h/--help and -s/--second
# - these are short and long forms of the same option.
# The "--" here is mandatory,
# it tells it from where to read the arguments.
argparse h/help s/second -- $argv
# exit if argparse failed because
# it found an option it didn't recognize
# - it will print an error
or return
# If -h or --help is given, we print a little help text and return
if set -ql _flag_help
echo "mybetterfunction [-h|--help] [-s|--second] [ARGUMENT ...]"
return 0
end
# If -s or --second is given, we print the second argument,
# not the first and third.
# (this is also available as _flag_s because of the short version)
if set -ql _flag_second
echo $argv[2]
else
echo $argv[1]
echo $argv[3]
end end


The options will be removed from $argv, so $argv[2] is the second positional argument now:

> mybetterfunction first -s second third
second


For more information on argparse, like how to handle option arguments, see the argparse documentation.

PATH variables

Path variables are a special kind of variable used to support colon-delimited path lists including PATH, CDPATH, MANPATH, PYTHONPATH, etc. All variables that end in "PATH" (case-sensitive) become PATH variables by default.

PATH variables act as normal lists, except they are implicitly joined and split on colons.

set MYPATH 1 2 3
echo "$MYPATH"
# 1:2:3
set MYPATH "$MYPATH:4:5"
echo $MYPATH
# 1 2 3 4 5
echo "$MYPATH"
# 1:2:3:4:5


Path variables will also be exported in the colon form, so set -x MYPATH 1 2 3 will have external commands see it as 1:2:3.

> set -gx MYPATH /bin /usr/bin /sbin
> env | grep MYPATH
MYPATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/sbin


This is for compatibility with other tools. Unix doesn't have variables with multiple elements, the closest thing it has are colon-lists like PATH. For obvious reasons this means no element can contain a :.

Variables can be marked or unmarked as PATH variables via the --path and --unpath options to set.

Special variables

You can change the settings of fish by changing the values of certain variables.

A list of directories in which to search for commands. This is a common unix variable also used by other tools.

A list of directories in which the cd builtin looks for a new directory.

The locale variables LANG, LC_ALL, LC_COLLATE, LC_CTYPE, LC_MESSAGES, LC_MONETARY, LC_NUMERIC, and LANG set the language option for the shell and subprograms. See the section Locale variables for more information.

A number of variable starting with the prefixes fish_color and fish_pager_color. See Variables for changing highlighting colors for more information.

If this is set to 1, fish will assume the terminal understands 24-bit RGB color sequences, and won't translate them to the 256 or 16 color palette. This is often detected automatically.

If this is set to 1, fish will assume the terminal understands 256 colors, and won't translate matching colors down to the 16 color palette. This is usually autodetected.

controls the computed width of ambiguous-width characters. This should be set to 1 if your terminal renders these characters as single-width (typical), or 2 if double-width.

controls whether fish assumes emoji render as 2 cells or 1 cell wide. This is necessary because the correct value changed from 1 to 2 in Unicode 9, and some terminals may not be aware. Set this if you see graphical glitching related to emoji (or other "special" characters). It should usually be auto-detected.

controls if Autosuggestions are enabled. Set it to 0 to disable, anything else to enable. By default they are on.

determines whether fish should try to repaint the commandline when the terminal resizes. In terminals that reflow text this should be disabled. Set it to 1 to enable, anything else to disable.

the name of the function that sets up the keyboard shortcuts for the command-line editor.

sets how long fish waits for another key after seeing an escape, to distinguish pressing the escape key from the start of an escape sequence. The default is 30ms. Increasing it increases the latency but allows pressing escape instead of alt for alt+character bindings. For more information, see the chapter in the bind documentation.

sets how long fish waits for another key after seeing a key that is part of a longer sequence, to disambiguate. For instance if you had bound \cx\ce to open an editor, fish would wait for this long in milliseconds to see a ctrl-e after a ctrl-x. If the time elapses, it will handle it as a ctrl-x (by default this would copy the current commandline to the clipboard). See also Key sequences.

determines where fish looks for completion. When trying to complete for a command, fish looks for files in the directories in this variable.

controls whether the selection is inclusive or exclusive of the character under the cursor (see Copy and Paste).

determines where fish looks for functions. When fish autoloads a function, it will look for files in these directories.

the greeting message printed on startup. This is printed by a function of the same name that can be overridden for more complicated changes (see funced)

the current history session name. If set, all subsequent commands within an interactive fish session will be logged to a separate file identified by the value of the variable. If unset, the default session name "fish" is used. If set to an empty string, history is not saved to disk (but is still available within the interactive session).

if set and not empty, will cause fish to print commands before they execute, similar to set -x in bash. The trace is printed to the path given by the --debug-output option to fish or the FISH_DEBUG_OUTPUT variable. It goes to stderr by default.

Controls which debug categories fish enables for output, analogous to the --debug option.

Specifies a file to direct debug output to.

a list of directories that are prepended to PATH. This can be a universal variable.

the current file creation mask. The preferred way to change the umask variable is through the umask function. An attempt to set umask to an invalid value will always fail.

your preferred web browser. If this variable is set, fish will use the specified browser instead of the system default browser to display the fish documentation.

Fish also provides additional information through the values of certain environment variables. Most of these variables are read-only and their value can't be changed with set.

_
the name of the currently running command (though this is deprecated, and the use of status current-command is preferred).

a list of arguments to the shell or function. argv is only defined when inside a function call, or if fish was invoked with a list of arguments, like fish myscript.fish foo bar. This variable can be changed.

the runtime of the last command in milliseconds.

the current size of the terminal in height and width. These values are only used by fish if the operating system does not report the size of the terminal. Both variables must be set in that case otherwise a default of 80x24 will be used. They are updated when the window size changes.

the signal that terminated the last foreground job, or 0 if the job exited normally.

a list of entries in fish's kill ring of cut text.

how many bytes fish will process with read or in a command substitution.

the process ID (PID) of the shell.

a list containing the last commands that were entered.

the user's home directory. This variable can be changed.

the machine's hostname.

the internal field separator that is used for word splitting with the read builtin. Setting this to the empty string will also disable line splitting in command substitution. This variable can be changed.

the process ID (PID) of the last background process.

the current working directory.

a list of exit statuses of all processes that made up the last executed pipe. See exit status.

the level of nesting of shells. Fish increments this in interactive shells, otherwise it simply passes it along.

the exit status of the last foreground job to exit. If the job was terminated through a signal, the exit status will be 128 plus the signal number.

the "generation" count of $status. This will be incremented only when the previous command produced an explicit status. (For example, background jobs will not increment this).

the type of the current terminal. When fish tries to determine how the terminal works - how many colors it supports, what sequences it sends for keys and other things - it looks at this variable and the corresponding information in the terminfo database (see man terminfo).

Note: Typically this should not be changed as the terminal sets it to the correct value.


the current username. This variable can be changed.

the current effective user id, set by fish at startup. This variable can be changed.

the version of the currently running fish (also available as FISH_VERSION for backward compatibility).

As a convention, an uppercase name is usually used for exported variables, while lowercase variables are not exported. (CMD_DURATION is an exception for historical reasons). This rule is not enforced by fish, but it is good coding practice to use casing to distinguish between exported and unexported variables.

Fish also uses some variables internally, their name usually starting with __fish. These are internal and should not typically be modified directly.

The status variable

Whenever a process exits, an exit status is returned to the program that started it (usually the shell). This exit status is an integer number, which tells the calling application how the execution of the command went. In general, a zero exit status means that the command executed without problem, but a non-zero exit status means there was some form of problem.

Fish stores the exit status of the last process in the last job to exit in the status variable.

If fish encounters a problem while executing a command, the status variable may also be set to a specific value:

  • 0 is generally the exit status of commands if they successfully performed the requested operation.
  • 1 is generally the exit status of commands if they failed to perform the requested operation.
  • 121 is generally the exit status of commands if they were supplied with invalid arguments.
  • 123 means that the command was not executed because the command name contained invalid characters.
  • 124 means that the command was not executed because none of the wildcards in the command produced any matches.
  • 125 means that while an executable with the specified name was located, the operating system could not actually execute the command.
  • 126 means that while a file with the specified name was located, it was not executable.
  • 127 means that no function, builtin or command with the given name could be located.

If a process exits through a signal, the exit status will be 128 plus the number of the signal.

The status can be negated with not (or !), which is useful in a condition. This turns a status of 0 into 1 and any non-zero status into 0.

There is also $pipestatus, which is a list of all status values of processes in a pipe. One difference is that not applies to $status, but not $pipestatus, because it loses information.

For example:

not cat file | grep -q fish
echo status is: $status pipestatus is $pipestatus


Here $status reflects the status of grep, which returns 0 if it found something, negated with not (so 1 if it found something, 0 otherwise). $pipestatus reflects the status of cat (which returns non-zero for example when it couldn't find the file) and grep, without the negation.

So if both cat and grep succeeded, $status would be 1 because of the not, and $pipestatus would be 0 and 0.

It's possible for the first command to fail while the second succeeds. One common example is when the second program quits early.

For example, if you have a pipeline like:

cat file1 file2 | head -n 50


This will tell cat to print two files, "file1" and "file2", one after the other, and the head will then only print the first 50 lines. In this case you might often see this constellation:

> cat file1 file2 | head -n 50
# 50 lines of output
> echo $pipestatus
141 0


Here, the "141" signifies that cat was killed by signal number 13 (128 + 13 == 141) - a SIGPIPE. You can also use fish_kill_signal to see the signal number. This happens because it was still working, and then head closed the pipe, so cat received a signal that it didn't ignore and so it died.

Whether cat here will see a SIGPIPE depends on how long the file is and how much it writes at once, so you might see a pipestatus of "0 0", depending on the implementation. This is a general unix issue and not specific to fish. Some shells feature a "pipefail" feature that will call a pipeline failed if one of the processes in it failed, and this is a big problem with it.

Locale Variables

The "locale" of a program is its set of language and regional settings that depend on language and cultural convention. In UNIX, these are made up of several categories. The categories are:

This is the typical environment variable for specifying a locale. A user may set this variable to express the language they speak, their region, and a character encoding. The actual values are specific to their platform, except for special values like C or POSIX.

The value of LANG is used for each category unless the variable for that category was set or LC_ALL is set. So typically you only need to set LANG.

An example value might be en_US.UTF-8 for the american version of english and the UTF-8 encoding, or de_AT.UTF-8 for the austrian version of german and the UTF-8 encoding. Your operating system might have a locale command that you can call as locale -a to see a list of defined locales.

A UTF-8 encoding is recommended.


Overrides the LANG environment variable and the values of the other LC_* variables. If this is set, none of the other variables are used for anything.

Usually the other variables should be used instead. Use LC_ALL only when you need to override something.


This determines the rules about equivalence of cases and alphabetical ordering: collation.

This determines classification rules, like if the type of character is an alpha, digit, and so on. Most importantly, it defines the text encoding - which numbers map to which characters. On modern systems, this should typically be something ending in "UTF-8".

LC_MESSAGES determines the language in which messages are diisplayed.

Determines currency, how it is formated, and the symbols used.

Sets the locale for formatting numbers.

Sets the locale for formatting dates and times.

Builtin commands

Fish includes a number of commands in the shell directly. We call these "builtins". These include:

  • Builtins that manipulate the shell state - cd changes directory, set sets variables
  • Builtins for dealing with data, like string for strings and math for numbers, count for counting lines or arguments, path for dealing with path
  • status for asking about the shell's status
  • printf and echo for creating output
  • test for checking conditions
  • argparse for parsing function arguments
  • source to read a script in the current shell (so changes to variables stay) and eval to execute a string as script
  • random to get random numbers or pick a random element from a list
  • read for reading from a pipe or the terminal

For a list of all builtins, use builtin -n.

For a list of all builtins, functions and commands shipped with fish, see the list of commands. The documentation is also available by using the --help switch.

Command lookup

When fish is told to run something, it goes through multiple steps to find it.

If it contains a /, fish tries to execute the given file, from the current directory on.

If it doesn't contain a /, it could be a function, builtin, or external command, and so fish goes through the full lookup.

In order:

1.
It tries to resolve it as a function.
  • If the function is already known, it uses that
  • If there is a file of the name with a ".fish" suffix in fish_function_path, it loads that. (If there is more than one file only the first is used)
  • If the function is now defined it uses that

2.
It tries to resolve it as a builtin.
3.
It tries to find an executable file in PATH.
  • If it finds a file, it tells the kernel to run it.
  • If the kernel knows how to run the file (e.g. via a #! line - #!/bin/sh or #!/usr/bin/python), it does it.
  • If the kernel reports that it couldn't run it because of a missing interpreter, and the file passes a rudimentary check, fish tells /bin/sh to run it.


If none of these work, fish runs the function fish_command_not_found and sets status to 127.

You can use type to see how fish resolved something:

> type --short --all echo
echo is a builtin
echo is /usr/bin/echo


Querying for user input

Sometimes, you want to ask the user for input, for instance to confirm something. This can be done with the read builtin.

Let's make up an example. This function will glob the files in all the directories it gets as arguments, and if there are more than five it will ask the user if it is supposed to show them, but only if it is connected to a terminal:

function show_files

# This will glob on all arguments. Any non-directories will be ignored.
set -l files $argv/*
# If there are more than 5 files
if test (count $files) -gt 5
# and both stdin (for reading input)
# and stdout (for writing the prompt)
# are terminals
and isatty stdin
and isatty stdout
# Keep asking until we get a valid response
while read --nchars 1 -l response --prompt-str="Are you sure? (y/n)"
or return 1 # if the read was aborted with ctrl-c/ctrl-d
switch $response
case y Y
echo Okay
# We break out of the while and go on with the function
break
case n N
# We return from the function without printing
echo Not showing
return 1
case '*'
# We go through the while loop and ask again
echo Not valid input
continue
end
end
end
# And now we print the files
printf '%s\n' $files end


If you run this as show_files /, it will most likely ask you until you press Y/y or N/n. If you run this as show_files / | cat, it will print the files without asking. If you run this as show_files ., it might just print something without asking because there are fewer than five files.

Shell variable and function names

The names given to variables and functions (so-called "identifiers") have to follow certain rules:

  • A variable name cannot be empty. It can contain only letters, digits, and underscores. It may begin and end with any of those characters.
  • A function name cannot be empty. It may not begin with a hyphen ("-") and may not contain a slash ("/"). All other characters, including a space, are valid. A function name also can't be the same as a reserved keyword or essential builtin like if or set.
  • A bind mode name (e.g., bind -m abc ...) must be a valid variable name.

Other things have other restrictions. For instance what is allowed for file names depends on your system, but at the very least they cannot contain a "/" (because that is the path separator) or NULL byte (because that is how UNIX ends strings).

Configuration files

When fish is started, it reads and runs its configuration files. Where these are depends on build configuration and environment variables.

The main file is ~/.config/fish/config.fish (or more precisely $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/fish/config.fish).

Configuration files are run in the following order:

Configuration snippets (named *.fish) in the directories:
  • $__fish_config_dir/conf.d (by default, ~/.config/fish/conf.d/)
  • $__fish_sysconf_dir/conf.d (by default, /etc/fish/conf.d/)
  • Directories for others to ship configuration snippets for their software:
  • the directories under $__fish_user_data_dir (usually ~/.local/share/fish, controlled by the XDG_DATA_HOME environment variable)
  • a fish/vendor_conf.d directory in the directories listed in $XDG_DATA_DIRS (default /usr/share/fish/vendor_conf.d and /usr/local/share/fish/vendor_conf.d)

These directories are also accessible in $__fish_vendor_confdirs. Note that changing that in a running fish won't do anything as by that point the directories have already been read.


If there are multiple files with the same name in these directories, only the first will be executed. They are executed in order of their filename, sorted (like globs) in a natural order (i.e. "01" sorts before "2").

  • System-wide configuration files, where administrators can include initialization for all users on the system - similar to /etc/profile for POSIX-style shells - in $__fish_sysconf_dir (usually /etc/fish/config.fish).
  • User configuration, usually in ~/.config/fish/config.fish (controlled by the XDG_CONFIG_HOME environment variable, and accessible as $__fish_config_dir).

~/.config/fish/config.fish is sourced after the snippets. This is so you can copy snippets and override some of their behavior.

These files are all executed on the startup of every shell. If you want to run a command only on starting an interactive shell, use the exit status of the command status --is-interactive to determine if the shell is interactive. If you want to run a command only when using a login shell, use status --is-login instead. This will speed up the starting of non-interactive or non-login shells.

If you are developing another program, you may want to add configuration for all users of fish on a system. This is discouraged; if not carefully written, they may have side-effects or slow the startup of the shell. Additionally, users of other shells won't benefit from the fish-specific configuration. However, if they are required, you can install them to the "vendor" configuration directory. As this path may vary from system to system, pkg-config should be used to discover it: pkg-config --variable confdir fish.

For system integration, fish also ships a file called __fish_build_paths.fish. This can be customized during build, for instance because your system requires special paths to be used.

Future feature flags

Feature flags are how fish stages changes that might break scripts. Breaking changes are introduced as opt-in, in a few releases they become opt-out, and eventually the old behavior is removed.

You can see the current list of features via status features:

> status features
stderr-nocaret          on  3.0 ^ no longer redirects stderr
qmark-noglob            on  3.0 ? no longer globs
regex-easyesc           on  3.1 string replace -r needs fewer \\'s
ampersand-nobg-in-token on  3.4 & only backgrounds if followed by a separating character
remove-percent-self     off 3.8 %self is no longer expanded (use $fish_pid)
test-require-arg        off 3.8 builtin test requires an argument


Here is what they mean:

  • stderr-nocaret was introduced in fish 3.0 (and made the default in 3.3). It makes ^ an ordinary character instead of denoting an stderr redirection, to make dealing with quoting and such easier. Use 2> instead. This can no longer be turned off since fish 3.5. The flag can still be tested for compatibility, but a no-stderr-nocaret value will simply be ignored.
  • qmark-noglob was also introduced in fish 3.0 (and made the default in 3.8). It makes ? an ordinary character instead of a single-character glob. Use a * instead (which will match multiple characters) or find other ways to match files like find.
  • regex-easyesc was introduced in 3.1. It makes it so the replacement expression in string replace -r does one fewer round of escaping. Before, to escape a backslash you would have to use string replace -ra '([ab])' '\\\\\\\\$1'. After, just '\\\\$1' is enough. Check your string replace calls if you use this anywhere.
  • ampersand-nobg-in-token was introduced in fish 3.4. It makes it so a & i no longer interpreted as the backgrounding operator in the middle of a token, so dealing with URLs becomes easier. Either put spaces or a semicolon after the &. This is recommended formatting anyway, and fish_indent will have done it for you already.
  • remove-percent-self turns off the special %self expansion. It was introduced in 3.8. To get fish's pid, you can use the fish_pid variable.
  • test-require-arg removes builtin test's one-argument form (test "string". It was introduced in 3.8. To test if a string is non-empty, use test -n "string". If disabled, any call to test that would change sends a debug message of category "deprecated-test", so starting fish with fish --debug=deprecated-test can be used to find offending calls.

These changes are introduced off by default. They can be enabled on a per session basis:

> fish --features qmark-noglob,regex-easyesc


or opted into globally for a user:

> set -U fish_features regex-easyesc qmark-noglob


Features will only be set on startup, so this variable will only take effect if it is universal or exported.

You can also use the version as a group, so 3.0 is equivalent to "stderr-nocaret" and "qmark-noglob". Instead of a version, the special group all enables all features.

Prefixing a feature with no- turns it off instead. E.g. to reenable the ? single-character glob:

set -Ua fish_features no-qmark-noglob


Currently, the following features are enabled by default:

  • stderr-nocaret - ^ no longer redirects stderr, use 2>. Enabled by default in fish 3.3.0. No longer changeable since fish 3.5.0.
  • regex-easyesc - string replace -r requires fewer backslashes in the replacement part. Enabled by default in fish 3.5.0.
  • ampersand-nobg-in-token - & in the middle of a word is a normal character instead of backgrounding. Enabled by default in fish 3.5.0.

Event handlers

When defining a new function in fish, it is possible to make it into an event handler, i.e. a function that is automatically run when a specific event takes place. Events that can trigger a handler currently are:

  • When a signal is delivered
  • When a job exits
  • When the value of a variable is updated
  • When the prompt is about to be shown

Example:

To specify a signal handler for the WINCH signal, write:

function my_signal_handler --on-signal WINCH

echo Got WINCH signal! end


Fish already has the following named events for the --on-event switch:

  • fish_prompt is emitted whenever a new fish prompt is about to be displayed.
  • fish_preexec is emitted right before executing an interactive command. The commandline is passed as the first parameter. Not emitted if command is empty.
  • fish_posterror is emitted right after executing a command with syntax errors. The commandline is passed as the first parameter.
  • fish_postexec is emitted right after executing an interactive command. The commandline is passed as the first parameter. Not emitted if command is empty.
  • fish_exit is emitted right before fish exits.
  • fish_cancel is emitted when a commandline is cleared.
  • fish_focus_in is emitted when fish's terminal gains focus.
  • fish_focus_out is emitted when fish's terminal loses focus.

Events can be fired with the emit command, and do not have to be defined before. The names just need to match. For example:

function handler --on-event imdone

echo generator is done $argv end function generator
sleep 1
# The "imdone" is the name of the event
# the rest is the arguments to pass to the handler
emit imdone with $argv end


If there are multiple handlers for an event, they will all be run, but the order might change between fish releases, so you should not rely on it.

Please note that event handlers only become active when a function is loaded, which means you need to otherwise source or execute a function instead of relying on autoloading. One approach is to put it into your configuration file.

For more information on how to define new event handlers, see the documentation for the function command.

Debugging fish scripts

Fish includes basic built-in debugging facilities that allow you to stop execution of a script at an arbitrary point. When this happens you are presented with an interactive prompt where you can execute any fish command to inspect or change state (there are no debug commands as such). For example, you can check or change the value of any variables using printf and set. As another example, you can run status print-stack-trace to see how the current breakpoint was reached. To resume normal execution of the script, simply type exit or ctrl-d.

To start a debug session simply insert the builtin command breakpoint at the point in a function or script where you wish to gain control, then run the function or script. Also, the default action of the TRAP signal is to call this builtin, meaning a running script can be actively debugged by sending it the TRAP signal (kill -s TRAP <PID>). There is limited support for interactively setting or modifying breakpoints from this debug prompt: it is possible to insert new breakpoints in (or remove old ones from) other functions by using the funced function to edit the definition of a function, but it is not possible to add or remove a breakpoint from the function/script currently loaded and being executed.

Another way to debug script issues is to set the fish_trace variable, e.g. fish_trace=1 fish_prompt to see which commands fish executes when running the fish_prompt function.

Profiling fish scripts

If you specifically want to debug performance issues, fish can be run with the --profile /path/to/profile.log option to save a profile to the specified path. This profile log includes a breakdown of how long each step in the execution took.

For example:

> fish --profile /tmp/sleep.prof -ic 'sleep 3s'
> cat /tmp/sleep.prof
Time    Sum     Command
3003419 3003419 > sleep 3s


This will show the time for each command itself in the first column, the time for the command and every subcommand (like any commands inside of a function or command substitutions) in the second and the command itself in the third, separated with tabs.

The time is given in microseconds.

To see the slowest commands last, sort -nk2 /path/to/logfile is useful.

For profiling fish's startup there is also --profile-startup /path/to/logfile.

See fish for more information.

Commands

This is a list of all the commands fish ships with.

Broadly speaking, these fall into a few categories:

Keywords

Core language keywords that make up the syntax, like

  • if and else for conditions.
  • for and while for loops.
  • break and continue to control loops.
  • function to define functions.
  • return to return a status from a function.
  • begin to begin a block and end to end any block (including ifs and loops).
  • and, or and not to combine commands logically.
  • switch and case to make multiple blocks depending on the value of a variable.
  • command or builtin to tell fish what sort of thing to execute
  • time to time execution
  • exec tells fish to replace itself with a command.
  • end to end a block

Tools

Builtins to do a task, like

  • cd to change the current directory.
  • echo or printf to produce output.
  • set_color to colorize output.
  • set to set, query or erase variables.
  • read to read input.
  • string for string manipulation.
  • path for filtering paths and handling their components.
  • math does arithmetic.
  • argparse to make arguments easier to handle.
  • count to count arguments.
  • type to find out what sort of thing (command, builtin or function) fish would call, or if it exists at all.
  • test checks conditions like if a file exists or a string is empty.
  • contains to see if a list contains an entry.
  • eval and source to run fish code from a string or file.
  • status to get shell information, like whether it's interactive or a login shell, or which file it is currently running.
  • abbr manages Abbreviations.
  • bind to change bindings.
  • complete manages completions.
  • commandline to get or change the commandline contents.
  • fish_config to easily change fish's configuration, like the prompt or colorscheme.
  • random to generate random numbers or pick from a list.

Known functions

Known functions are a customization point. You can change them to change how your fish behaves. This includes:

  • fish_prompt and fish_right_prompt and fish_mode_prompt to print your prompt.
  • fish_command_not_found to tell fish what to do when a command is not found.
  • fish_title to change the terminal's title.
  • fish_greeting to show a greeting when fish starts.
  • fish_should_add_to_history to determine if a command should be added to history

Helper functions

Some helper functions, often to give you information for use in your prompt:

  • fish_git_prompt and fish_hg_prompt to print information about the current git or mercurial repository.
  • fish_vcs_prompt to print information for either.
  • fish_svn_prompt to print information about the current svn repository.
  • fish_status_to_signal to give a signal name from a return status.
  • prompt_pwd to give the current directory in a nicely formatted and shortened way.
  • prompt_login to describe the current login, with user and hostname, and to explain if you are in a chroot or connected via ssh.
  • prompt_hostname to give the hostname, shortened for use in the prompt.
  • fish_is_root_user to check if the current user is an administrator user like root.
  • fish_add_path to easily add a path to $PATH.
  • alias to quickly define wrapper functions ("aliases").
  • fish_delta to show what you have changed from the default configuration.
  • export as a compatibility function for other shells.

Helper commands

fish also ships some things as external commands so they can be easily called from elsewhere.

This includes fish_indent to format fish code and fish_key_reader to show you what escape sequence a keypress produces.

The full list

And here is the full list:

_ - call fish's translations

Synopsis

_ STRING

Description

_ translates its arguments into the current language, if possible.

It is equivalent to gettext fish STRING, meaning it can only be used to look up fish's own translations.

It requires fish to be built with gettext support. If that support is disabled, or there is no translation it will simply echo the argument back.

The language depends on the current locale, set with LANG and LC_MESSAGES.

Options

_ takes no options.

Examples

> _ File
Datei


abbr - manage fish abbreviations

Synopsis

abbr --add NAME [--position command | anywhere] [-r | --regex PATTERN] [-c | --command COMMAND]

[--set-cursor[=MARKER]] ([-f | --function FUNCTION] | EXPANSION) abbr --erase NAME ... abbr --rename OLD_WORD NEW_WORD abbr --show abbr --list abbr --query NAME ...

Description

abbr manages abbreviations - user-defined words that are replaced with longer phrases when entered.

NOTE:

Only typed-in commands use abbreviations. Abbreviations are not expanded in scripts.


For example, a frequently-run command like git checkout can be abbreviated to gco. After entering gco and pressing space or enter, the full text git checkout will appear in the command line. To avoid expanding something that looks like an abbreviation, the default ctrl-space binding inserts a space without expanding.

An abbreviation may match a literal word, or it may match a pattern given by a regular expression. When an abbreviation matches a word, that word is replaced by new text, called its expansion. This expansion may be a fixed new phrase, or it can be dynamically created via a fish function. This expansion occurs after pressing space or enter.

Combining these features, it is possible to create custom syntaxes, where a regular expression recognizes matching tokens, and the expansion function interprets them. See the Examples section.

Changed in version 3.6.0: Previous versions of this allowed saving abbreviations in universal variables. That's no longer possible. Existing variables will still be imported and abbr --erase will also erase the variables. We recommend adding abbreviations to config.fish by just adding the abbr --add command. When you run abbr, you will see output like this

> abbr
abbr -a -- foo bar # imported from a universal variable, see `help abbr`


In that case you should take the part before the # comment and save it in config.fish, then you can run abbr --erase to remove the universal variable:

> abbr >> ~/.config/fish/config.fish
> abbr --erase (abbr --list)


Alternatively you can keep them in a separate configuration file by doing something like the following:

> abbr > ~/.config/fish/conf.d/myabbrs.fish


This will save all your abbrevations in "myabbrs.fish", overwriting the whole file so it doesn't leave any duplicates, or restore abbreviations you had erased. Of course any functions will have to be saved separately, see funcsave.

"add" subcommand

abbr [-a | --add] NAME [--position command | anywhere] [-r | --regex PATTERN]

[-c | --command COMMAND] [--set-cursor[=MARKER]] ([-f | --function FUNCTION] | EXPANSION)

abbr --add creates a new abbreviation. With no other options, the string NAME is replaced by EXPANSION.

With --position command, the abbreviation will only expand when it is positioned as a command, not as an argument to another command. With --position anywhere the abbreviation may expand anywhere in the command line. The default is command.

With --command COMMAND, the abbreviation will only expand when it is used as an argument to the given COMMAND. Multiple --command can be used together, and the abbreviation will expand for each. An empty COMMAND means it will expand only when there is no command. --command implies --position anywhere and disallows --position command. Even with different COMMANDS, the NAME of the abbreviation needs to be unique. Consider using --regex if you want to expand the same word differently for multiple commands.

With --regex, the abbreviation matches using the regular expression given by PATTERN, instead of the literal NAME. The pattern is interpreted using PCRE2 syntax and must match the entire token. If multiple abbreviations match the same token, the last abbreviation added is used.

With --set-cursor=MARKER, the cursor is moved to the first occurrence of MARKER in the expansion. The MARKER value is erased. The MARKER may be omitted (i.e. simply --set-cursor), in which case it defaults to %.

With -f FUNCTION or --function FUNCTION, FUNCTION is treated as the name of a fish function instead of a literal replacement. When the abbreviation matches, the function will be called with the matching token as an argument. If the function's exit status is 0 (success), the token will be replaced by the function's output; otherwise the token will be left unchanged. No EXPANSION may be given separately.

Examples

abbr --add gco git checkout


Add a new abbreviation where gco will be replaced with git checkout.

abbr -a --position anywhere -- -C --color


Add a new abbreviation where -C will be replaced with --color. The -- allows -C to be treated as the name of the abbreviation, instead of an option.

abbr -a L --position anywhere --set-cursor "% | less"


Add a new abbreviation where L will be replaced with | less, placing the cursor before the pipe.

function last_history_item

echo $history[1] end abbr -a !! --position anywhere --function last_history_item


This first creates a function last_history_item which outputs the last entered command. It then adds an abbreviation which replaces !! with the result of calling this function. Taken together, this is similar to the !! history expansion feature of bash.

function vim_edit

echo vim $argv end abbr -a vim_edit_texts --position command --regex ".+\.txt" --function vim_edit


This first creates a function vim_edit which prepends vim before its argument. It then adds an abbreviation which matches commands ending in .txt, and replaces the command with the result of calling this function. This allows text files to be "executed" as a command to open them in vim, similar to the "suffix alias" feature in zsh.

abbr 4DIRS --set-cursor=! "$(string join \n -- 'for dir in */' 'cd $dir' '!' 'cd ..' 'end')"


This creates an abbreviation "4DIRS" which expands to a multi-line loop "template." The template enters each directory and then leaves it. The cursor is positioned ready to enter the command to run in each directory, at the location of the !, which is itself erased.

::
abbr --command git co checkout

Turns "co" as an argument to "git" into "checkout". Multiple commands are possible, --command={git,hg} would expand "co" to "checkout" for both git and hg.

Other subcommands

abbr --rename OLD_NAME NEW_NAME


Renames an abbreviation, from OLD_NAME to NEW_NAME

abbr [-s | --show]


Show all abbreviations in a manner suitable for import and export

abbr [-l | --list]


Prints the names of all abbreviation

abbr [-e | --erase] NAME


Erases the abbreviation with the given name

abbr -q or --query [NAME...]


Return 0 (true) if one of the NAME is an abbreviation.

abbr -h or --help


Displays help for the abbr command.

alias - create a function

Synopsis

alias
alias [--save] NAME DEFINITION
alias [--save] NAME=DEFINITION

Description

NOTE: This page documents the fish builtin alias. To see the documentation on any non-fish versions, use command man alias.

alias is a simple wrapper for the function builtin, which creates a function wrapping a command. It has similar syntax to POSIX shell alias. For other uses, it is recommended to define a function.

If you want to ease your interactive use, to save typing, consider using an abbreviation instead.

fish marks functions that have been created by alias by including the command used to create them in the function description. You can list alias-created functions by running alias without arguments. They must be erased using functions -e.

  • NAME is the name of the alias
  • DEFINITION is the actual command to execute. alias automatically appends $argv, so that all parameters used with the alias are passed to the actual command.

You cannot create an alias to a function with the same name. Note that spaces need to be escaped in the call to alias just like at the command line, even inside quoted parts.

The following options are available:

Displays help about using this command.
Saves the function created by the alias into your fish configuration directory using funcsave.

Example

The following code will create rmi, which runs rm with additional arguments on every invocation.

alias rmi="rm -i"
# This is equivalent to entering the following function:
function rmi --wraps rm --description 'alias rmi=rm -i'

rm -i $argv end


alias sometimes requires escaping, as you can see here:

# This needs to have the spaces escaped or "Chrome.app..."
# will be seen as an argument to "/Applications/Google":
alias chrome='/Applications/Google\ Chrome.app/Contents/MacOS/Google\ Chrome'


See more

1.
The function command this builds on.
2.
Functions.
3.
Defining aliases.

and - conditionally execute a command

Synopsis

PREVIOUS; and COMMAND

Description

and is used to execute a command if the previous command was successful (returned a status of 0).

and statements may be used as part of the condition in an while or if block.

and does not change the current exit status itself, but the command it runs most likely will. The exit status of the last foreground command to exit can always be accessed using the $status variable.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Example

The following code runs the make command to build a program. If the build succeeds, make's exit status is 0, and the program is installed. If either step fails, the exit status is 1, and make clean is run, which removes the files created by the build process.

make; and make install; or make clean


See Also

  • or command
  • not command

argparse - parse options passed to a fish script or function

Synopsis

argparse [OPTIONS] OPTION_SPEC ... -- [ARG ...]

Description

This command makes it easy for fish scripts and functions to handle arguments. You pass arguments that define the known options, followed by a literal --, then the arguments to be parsed (which might also include a literal --). argparse then sets variables to indicate the passed options with their values, and sets $argv to the remaining arguments. See the usage section below.

Each option specification (OPTION_SPEC) is written in the domain specific language described below. All OPTION_SPECs must appear after any argparse flags and before the -- that separates them from the arguments to be parsed.

Each option that is seen in the ARG list will result in variables named _flag_X, where X is the short flag letter and the long flag name (if they are defined). For example a --help option could cause argparse to define one variable called _flag_h and another called _flag_help.

The variables will be set with local scope (i.e., as if the script had done set -l _flag_X). If the flag is a boolean (that is, it just is passed or not, it doesn't have a value) the values are the short and long flags seen. If the option is not a boolean the values will be zero or more values corresponding to the values collected when the ARG list is processed. If the flag was not seen the flag variable will not be set.

Options

The following argparse options are available. They must appear before all OPTION_SPECs:

The command name for use in error messages. By default the current function name will be used, or argparse if run outside of a function.
A comma separated list of options that are mutually exclusive. You can use this more than once to define multiple sets of mutually exclusive options. You give either the short or long version of each option, and you still need to otherwise define the options.
The minimum number of acceptable non-option arguments. The default is zero.
The maximum number of acceptable non-option arguments. The default is infinity.
Ignores unknown options, keeping them and their arguments in $argv instead.
Causes scanning the arguments to stop as soon as the first non-option argument is seen. Among other things, this is useful to implement subcommands that have their own options.
Displays help about using this command.

Usage

To use this command, pass the option specifications (OPTION_SPEC), a mandatory --, and then the arguments to be parsed.

A simple example:

argparse 'h/help' 'n/name=' -- $argv
or return


If $argv is empty then there is nothing to parse and argparse returns zero to indicate success. If $argv is not empty then it is checked for flags -h, --help, -n and --name. If they are found they are removed from the arguments and local variables called _flag_OPTION are set so the script can determine which options were seen. If $argv doesn't have any errors, like an unknown option or a missing mandatory value for an option, then argparse exits with a status of zero. Otherwise it writes appropriate error messages to stderr and exits with a status of one.

The or return means that the function returns argparse's status if it failed, so if it goes on argparse succeeded.

To use the flags argparse has extracted:

# Checking for _flag_h and _flag_help is equivalent
# We check if it has been given at least once
if set -ql _flag_h

echo "Usage: my_function [-h | --help] [-n | --name=NAME]" >&2
return 1 end set -l myname somedefault set -ql _flag_name[1] and set myname $_flag_name[-1] # here we use the *last* --name=


Any characters in the flag name that are not valid in a variable name (like - dashes) will be replaced with underscores.

The -- argument is required. You do not have to include any option specifications or arguments after the -- but you must include the --. For example, this is acceptable:

set -l argv foo
argparse 'h/help' 'n/name' -- $argv
argparse --min-args=1 -- $argv


But this is not:

set -l argv
argparse 'h/help' 'n/name' $argv


The first -- seen is what allows the argparse command to reliably separate the option specifications and options to argparse itself (like --ignore-unknown) from the command arguments, so it is required.

Option Specifications

Each option specification consists of:

  • An optional alphanumeric short flag character, followed by a / if the short flag can be used by someone invoking your command or, for backwards compatibility, a - if it should not be exposed as a valid short flag (in which case it will also not be exposed as a flag variable).
  • An optional long flag name, which if not present the short flag can be used, and if that is also not present, an error is reported
  • Nothing if the flag is a boolean that takes no argument or is an integer flag, or
  • = if it requires a value and only the last instance of the flag is saved, or
  • =? if it takes an optional value and only the last instance of the flag is saved, or
  • =+ if it requires a value and each instance of the flag is saved.



Optionally a ! followed by fish script to validate the value. Typically this will be a function to run. If the exit status is zero the value for the flag is valid. If non-zero the value is invalid. Any error messages should be written to stdout (not stderr). See the section on Flag Value Validation for more information.

See the fish_opt command for a friendlier but more verbose way to create option specifications.

If a flag is not seen when parsing the arguments then the corresponding _flag_X var(s) will not be set.

Integer flag

Sometimes commands take numbers directly as options, like foo -55. To allow this one option spec can have the # modifier so that any integer will be understood as this flag, and the last number will be given as its value (as if = was used).

The # must follow the short flag letter (if any), and other modifiers like = are not allowed, except for - (for backwards compatibility):

m#maximum


This does not read numbers given as +NNN, only those that look like flags - -NNN.

Note: Optional arguments

An option defined with =? can take optional arguments. Optional arguments have to be directly attached to the option they belong to.

That means the argument will only be used for the option if you use it like:

cmd --flag=value
# or
cmd  -fvalue


but not if used like:

cmd --flag value
# "value" here will be used as a positional argument
# and "--flag" won't have an argument.


If this weren't the case, using an option without an optional argument would be difficult if you also wanted to use positional arguments.

For example:

grep --color auto
# Here "auto" will be used as the search string,
# "color" will not have an argument and will fall back to the default,
# which also *happens to be* auto.
grep --color always
# Here grep will still only use color "auto"matically
# and search for the string "always".


This isn't specific to argparse but common to all things using getopt(3) (if they have optional arguments at all). That grep example is how GNU grep actually behaves.

Flag Value Validation

Sometimes you need to validate the option values. For example, that it is a valid integer within a specific range, or an ip address, or something entirely different. You can always do this after argparse returns but you can also request that argparse perform the validation by executing arbitrary fish script. To do so simply append an ! (exclamation-mark) then the fish script to be run. When that code is executed three vars will be defined:

  • _argparse_cmd will be set to the value of the value of the argparse --name value.
  • _flag_name will be set to the short or long flag that being processed.
  • _flag_value will be set to the value associated with the flag being processed.

These variables are passed to the function as local exported variables.

The script should write any error messages to stdout, not stderr. It should return a status of zero if the flag value is valid otherwise a non-zero status to indicate it is invalid.

Fish ships with a _validate_int function that accepts a --min and --max flag. Let's say your command accepts a -m or --max flag and the minimum allowable value is zero and the maximum is 5. You would define the option like this: m/max=!_validate_int --min 0 --max 5. The default if you just call _validate_int without those flags is to simply check that the value is a valid integer with no limits on the min or max value allowed.

Here are some examples of flag validations:

# validate that a path is a directory
argparse 'p/path=!test -d "$_flag_value"' -- --path $__fish_config_dir
# validate that a function does not exist
argparse 'f/func=!not functions -q "$_flag_value"' -- -f alias
# validate that a string matches a regex
argparse 'c/color=!string match -rq \'^#?[0-9a-fA-F]{6}$\' "$_flag_value"' -- -c 'c0ffee'
# validate with a validator function
argparse 'n/num=!_validate_int --min 0 --max 99' -- --num 42


Example OPTION_SPECs

Some OPTION_SPEC examples:

  • h/help means that both -h and --help are valid. The flag is a boolean and can be used more than once. If either flag is used then _flag_h and _flag_help will be set to however either flag was seen, as many times as it was seen. So it could be set to -h, -h and --help, and count $_flag_h would yield "3".
  • help means that only --help is valid. The flag is a boolean and can be used more than once. If it is used then _flag_help will be set as above. Also h-help (with an arbitrary short letter) for backwards compatibility.
  • longonly= is a flag --longonly that requires an option, there is no short flag or even short flag variable.
  • n/name= means that both -n and --name are valid. It requires a value and can be used at most once. If the flag is seen then _flag_n and _flag_name will be set with the single mandatory value associated with the flag.
  • n/name=? means that both -n and --name are valid. It accepts an optional value and can be used at most once. If the flag is seen then _flag_n and _flag_name will be set with the value associated with the flag if one was provided else it will be set with no values.
  • name=+ means that only --name is valid. It requires a value and can be used more than once. If the flag is seen then _flag_name will be set with the values associated with each occurrence.
  • x means that only -x is valid. It is a boolean that can be used more than once. If it is seen then _flag_x will be set as above.
  • x=, x=?, and x=+ are similar to the n/name examples above but there is no long flag alternative to the short flag -x.
  • #max (or #-max) means that flags matching the regex "^--?\d+$" are valid. When seen they are assigned to the variable _flag_max. This allows any valid positive or negative integer to be specified by prefixing it with a single "-". Many commands support this idiom. For example head -3 /a/file to emit only the first three lines of /a/file.
  • n#max means that flags matching the regex "^--?\d+$" are valid. When seen they are assigned to the variables _flag_n and _flag_max. This allows any valid positive or negative integer to be specified by prefixing it with a single "-". Many commands support this idiom. For example head -3 /a/file to emit only the first three lines of /a/file. You can also specify the value using either flag: -n NNN or --max NNN in this example.
  • #longonly causes the last integer option to be stored in _flag_longonly.

After parsing the arguments the argv variable is set with local scope to any values not already consumed during flag processing. If there are no unbound values the variable is set but count $argv will be zero.

If an error occurs during argparse processing it will exit with a non-zero status and print error messages to stderr.

Examples

A simple use:

argparse h/help -- $argv
or return
if set -q _flag_help

# TODO: Print help here
return 0 end


This just wants one option - -h / --help. Any other option is an error. If it is given it prints help and exits.

How fish_add_path - add to the path parses its args:

argparse -x g,U -x P,U -x a,p g/global U/universal P/path p/prepend a/append h/help m/move v/verbose n/dry-run -- $argv


There are a variety of boolean flags, all with long and short versions. A few of these cannot be used together, and that is what the -x flag is used for. -x g,U means that --global and --universal or their short equivalents conflict, and if they are used together you get an error. In this case you only need to give the short or long flag, not the full option specification.

After this it figures out which variable it should operate on according to the --path flag:

set -l var fish_user_paths
set -q _flag_path
and set var PATH
# ...
# Check for --dry-run.
# The "-" has been replaced with a "_" because
# it is not valid in a variable name
not set -ql _flag_dry_run
and set $var $result


Limitations

One limitation with --ignore-unknown is that, if an unknown option is given in a group with known options, the entire group will be kept in $argv. argparse will not do any permutations here.

For instance:

argparse --ignore-unknown h -- -ho
echo $_flag_h # is -h, because -h was given
echo $argv # is still -ho


This limitation may be lifted in future.

Additionally, it can only parse known options up to the first unknown option in the group - the unknown option could take options, so it isn't clear what any character after an unknown option means.

begin - start a new block of code

Synopsis

begin; [COMMANDS ...]; end

Description

begin is used to create a new block of code.

A block allows the introduction of a new variable scope, redirection of the input or output of a set of commands as a group, or to specify precedence when using the conditional commands like and.

The block is unconditionally executed. begin; ...; end is equivalent to if true; ...; end.

begin does not change the current exit status itself. After the block has completed, $status will be set to the status returned by the most recent command.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Example

The following code sets a number of variables inside of a block scope. Since the variables are set inside the block and have local scope, they will be automatically deleted when the block ends.

begin

set -l PIRATE Yarrr
... end echo $PIRATE # This will not output anything, since the PIRATE variable # went out of scope at the end of the block


In the following code, all output is redirected to the file out.html.

begin

echo $xml_header
echo $html_header
if test -e $file
...
end
... end > out.html


bg - send jobs to background

Synopsis

bg [PID ...]

Description

bg sends jobs to the background, resuming them if they are stopped.

A background job is executed simultaneously with fish, and does not have access to the keyboard. If no job is specified, the last job to be used is put in the background. If PID is specified, the jobs containing the specified process IDs are put in the background.

A PID of the format %n, where n is an integer, will be interpreted as the PID of job number n. Job numbers can be seen in the output of jobs.

When at least one of the arguments isn't a valid job specifier, bg will print an error without backgrounding anything.

When all arguments are valid job specifiers, bg will background all matching jobs that exist.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Example

The typical use is to run something, stop it with ctrl-z, and then continue it in the background with bg:

> find / -name "*.js" >/tmp/jsfiles 2>/dev/null # oh no, this takes too long, let's press Ctrl-z!
fish: Job 1, 'find / -name "*.js" >/tmp/jsfil…' has stopped
> bg
Send job 1 'find / -name "*.js" >/tmp/jsfiles 2>/dev/null' to background
> # I can continue using this shell!
> # Eventually:
fish: Job 1, 'find / -name "*.js" >/tmp/jsfil…' has ended


bg 123 456 789 will background the jobs that contain processes 123, 456 and 789.

If only 123 and 789 exist, it will still background them and print an error about 456.

bg 123 banana or bg banana 123 will complain that "banana" is not a valid job specifier.

bg %2 will background job 2.

bind - handle fish key bindings

Synopsis

bind [(-M | --mode) MODE] [(-m | --sets-mode) NEW_MODE] [--preset | --user] [-s | --silent] KEYS COMMAND ...
bind [(-M | --mode) MODE] [--preset] [--user] [KEYS]
bind [-a | --all] [--preset] [--user]
bind (-f | --function-names)
bind (-L | --list-modes)
bind (-e | --erase) [(-M | --mode) MODE] [--preset] [--user] [-a | --all] | KEYS ...

Description

bind manages key bindings.

If both KEYS and COMMAND are given, bind adds (or replaces) a binding in MODE. If only KEYS is given, any existing binding in the given MODE will be printed.

KEYS is a comma-separated list of key names. Modifier keys can be specified by prefixing a key name with a combination of ctrl-, alt- and shift-. For example, pressing w while holding the Alt modifier is written as alt-w. Key names are case-sensitive; for example alt-W is the same as alt-shift-w. ctrl-x,ctrl-e would mean pressing ctrl-x followed by ctrl-e.

Some keys have names, usually because they don't have an obvious printable character representation. They are:

  • the arrow keys up, down, left and right,
  • backspace,
  • comma (,),
  • delete,
  • end,
  • enter,
  • escape,
  • f1 through f12.
  • home,
  • insert,
  • minus (-),
  • pageup,
  • pagedown,
  • space and
  • tab,

These names are case-sensitive.

An empty value ('') for KEYS designates the generic binding that will be used if nothing else matches. For most bind modes, it makes sense to bind this to the self-insert function (i.e. bind '' self-insert). This will insert any keystrokes that have no bindings otherwise. Non-printable characters are ignored by the editor, so this will not result in control sequences being inserted.

To find the name of a key combination you can use fish_key_reader.

COMMAND can be any fish command, but it can also be one of a set of special input functions. These include functions for moving the cursor, operating on the kill-ring, performing tab completion, etc. Use bind --function-names or see below for a list of these input functions.

NOTE:

If a script changes the commandline, it should finish by calling the repaint special input function.


If no KEYS argument is provided, all bindings (in the given MODE) are printed. If KEYS is provided but no COMMAND, just the binding matching that sequence is printed.

Key bindings may use "modes", which mimics vi's modal input behavior. The default mode is "default". Every key binding applies to a single mode; you can specify which one with -M MODE. If the key binding should change the mode, you can specify the new mode with -m NEW_MODE. The mode can be viewed and changed via the $fish_bind_mode variable. If you want to change the mode from inside a fish function, use set fish_bind_mode MODE.

To save custom key bindings, put the bind statements into config.fish. Alternatively, fish also automatically executes a function called fish_user_key_bindings if it exists.

Options

The following options are available:

Display a list of available input functions
Display a list of defined bind modes
Specify a bind mode that the bind is used in. Defaults to "default"
Change the current mode to NEW_MODE after this binding is executed
Erase the binding with the given sequence and mode instead of defining a new one. Multiple sequences can be specified with this flag. Specifying -a or --all with -M or --mode erases all binds in the given mode regardless of sequence. Specifying -a or --all without -M or --mode erases all binds in all modes regardless of sequence.
See --erase
Specify if bind should operate on user or preset bindings. User bindings take precedence over preset bindings when fish looks up mappings. By default, all bind invocations work on the "user" level except for listing, which will show both levels. All invocations except for inserting new bindings can operate on both levels at the same time (if both --preset and --user are given). --preset should only be used in full binding sets (like when working on fish_vi_key_bindings).
Silences some of the error messages, including for unknown key names and unbound sequences.
Displays help about using this command.

Special input functions

The following special input functions are available:

only execute the next function if the previous succeeded (note: only some functions report success)
accept the current autosuggestion. Returns false when there was nothing to accept.
move one character to the left. If the completion pager is active, select the previous completion instead.
move one character to the left, but do not trigger any non-movement-related operations. If the cursor is at the start of the commandline, does nothing. Does not change the selected item in the completion pager UI when shown.
move one whitespace-delimited word to the left
move one argument to the left
deletes one character of input to the left of the cursor
move the whitespace-delimited word to the left of the cursor to the killring
move the argument to the left of the cursor to the killring
move everything from the beginning of the line to the cursor to the killring
move one path component to the left of the cursor to the killring. A path component is everything likely to belong to a path component, i.e. not any of the following: /={,}'":@ |;<>&, plus newlines and tabs.
move the word to the left of the cursor to the killring. The "word" here is everything up to punctuation or whitespace.
move one word to the left
moves to the beginning of the buffer, i.e. the start of the first line
move to the beginning of the history
move to the beginning of the line
start selecting text
cancel the current commandline and replace it with a new empty one
cancel the current commandline and replace it with a new empty one, leaving the old one in place with a marker to show that it was cancelled
make the current word begin with a capital letter
clears the screen and redraws the prompt. if the terminal doesn't support clearing the screen it is the same as repaint.
guess the remainder of the current token
invoke the searchable pager on completion options (for convenience, this also moves backwards in the completion pager)
delete one character to the right of the cursor
delete one character to the right of the cursor, or exit the shell if the commandline is empty
move down one line
make the current word lowercase
moves to the end of the buffer, i.e. the end of the first line
move to the end of the history
move to the end of the line
end selecting text
expands any abbreviation currently under the cursor
run the current commandline
exit the shell
move one whitespace-delimited word to the right
move one argument to the right
move one character to the right; or if at the end of the commandline, accept the current autosuggestion. If the completion pager is active, select the next completion instead.
move one character to the right, but do not trigger any non-movement-related operations. If the cursor is at the end of the commandline, does not accept the current autosuggestion (if any). Does not change the selected item in the completion pager, if shown.
move one character to the right; or if at the end of the commandline, accept a single char from the current autosuggestion.
move one word to the right; or if at the end of the commandline, accept one word from the current autosuggestion.
history-pager
invoke the searchable pager on history (incremental search); or if the history pager is already active, search further backwards in time.
history-pager-delete
permanently delete the current history item, either from the history pager or from an active up-arrow history search
history-search-backward
search the history for the previous match
history-search-forward
search the history for the next match
history-prefix-search-backward
search the history for the previous prefix match
history-prefix-search-forward
search the history for the next prefix match
history-token-search-backward
search the history for the previous matching argument
history-token-search-forward
search the history for the next matching argument
read another character and jump to its next occurence after/before the cursor
jump to right before the next occurrence
redo the last jump in the same/opposite direction
jump to matching bracket if the character under the cursor is bracket; otherwise, jump to the next occurence of any right bracket after the cursor. The following brackets are considered: ([{}])
the same as jump-to-matching-bracket but offset cursor to the right for left bracket, and offset cursor to the left for right bracket. The offset is applied for both the position we jump from and position we jump to. In other words, the cursor will continuously jump inside the brackets but won't reach them by 1 character. The input function is useful to emulate ib vi text object. The following brackets are considered: ([{}])
move the next whitespace-delimited word to the killring
move the next argument to the killring
move everything from the cursor to the end of the line to the killring
move the selected text to the killring
move the line (including the following newline) to the killring. If the line is the last line, its preceeding newline is also removed
move the line (without the following newline) to the killring
move the next word to the killring
if the commandline is empty, then move forward in the directory history, otherwise move one word to the right; or if at the end of the commandline, accept one word from the current autosuggestion.
only execute the next function if the previous did not succeed (note: only some functions report failure)
toggles the search field if the completions pager is visible; or if used after history-pager, search forwards in time.
if the commandline is empty, then move backward in the directory history, otherwise move one word to the left
reexecutes the prompt functions and redraws the prompt (also force-repaint for backwards-compatibility)
reexecutes the fish_mode_prompt and redraws the prompt. This is useful for vi mode. If no fish_mode_prompt exists or it prints nothing, it acts like a normal repaint.
inserts the matching sequence into the command line
inserts the matching sequence into the command line, unless the cursor is at the beginning
remove the current autosuggestion. Returns true if there was a suggestion to remove.
go to the other end of the highlighted text without changing the selection
transpose two characters to the left of the cursor
transpose two words to the left of the cursor
toggle the capitalisation (case) of the character under the cursor
toggle the capitalisation (case) of the selection
add a new line under the current line
add a new line over the current line
move up one line
revert or redo the most recent edits on the command line
make the current word uppercase
insert the latest entry of the killring into the buffer
rotate to the previous entry of the killring

Additional functions

The following functions are included as normal functions, but are particularly useful for input editing:

move the cursor or search the history depending on the cursor position and current mode
open the visual editor (controlled by the VISUAL or EDITOR environment variables) with the current command-line contents
copy the current selection to the system clipboard
paste the current selection from the system clipboard before the cursor
append the argument to the command-line. If the command-line already ends with the argument, this removes the suffix instead. Starts with the last command from history if the command-line is empty.
prepend the argument to the command-line. If the command-line already starts with the argument, this removes the prefix instead. Starts with the last command from history if the command-line is empty.

Examples

Exit the shell when ctrl-d is pressed:

bind ctrl-d 'exit'


Perform a history search when pageup is pressed:

bind pageup history-search-backward


Turn on vi key bindings and rebind ctrl-c to clear the input line:

set -g fish_key_bindings fish_vi_key_bindings
bind -M insert ctrl-c kill-whole-line repaint


Launch git diff and repaint the commandline afterwards when ctrl-g is pressed:

bind ctrl-g 'git diff' repaint


Terminal Limitations

Unix terminals, like the ones fish operates in, are at heart 70s technology. They have some limitations that applications running inside them can't workaround.

For instance, historically the control key modifies a character by setting the top three bits to 0. This means:

  • Many characters + control are indistinguishable from other keys: ctrl-i is tab, ctrl-j is newline (\n).
  • Control and shift don't work simultaneously - ctrl-X is the same as ctrl-x.

Other keys don't have a direct encoding, and are sent as escape sequences. For example right () usually sends \e\[C.

Some modern terminals support newer encodings for keys, that allow distinguishing more characters and modifiers, and fish enables as many of these as it can, automatically.

When in doubt, run fish_key_reader - explore what characters keyboard keys send. If that tells you that pressing ctrl-i sends tab, your terminal does not support these better encodings, and so fish is limited to what it sends.

Key timeout

When you've bound a sequence of multiple characters, there is always the possibility that fish has only seen a part of it, and then it needs to disambiguate between the full sequence and part of it.

For example:

bind j,k 'commandline -i foo'
# or `bind jk`


will bind the sequence jk to insert "foo" into the commandline. When you've only pressed "j", fish doesn't know if it should insert the "j" (because of the default self-insert), or wait for the "k".

You can enable a timeout for this, by setting the fish_sequence_key_delay_ms variable to the timeout in milliseconds. If the timeout elapses, fish will no longer wait for the sequence to be completed, and do what it can with the characters it already has.

The escape key is a special case, because it can be used standalone as a real key or as part of a longer escape sequence, like function or arrow keys. Holding alt and something else also typically sends escape, for example holding alt+a will send an escape character and then an "a". So the escape character has its own timeout configured with fish_escape_delay_ms.

See also Key sequences.

block - temporarily block delivery of events

Synopsis

block [(--local | --global)]
block --erase

Description

block delays delivery of all events triggered by fish or the emit, thus delaying the execution of any function registered --on-event, --on-process-exit, --on-job-exit, --on-variable and --on-signal until after the block is removed.

Event blocks should not be confused with code blocks, which are created with begin, if, while or for

Without options, block sets up a block that is released automatically at the end of the current function scope.

The following options are available:

Release the block automatically at the end of the current innermost code block scope.
Never automatically release the lock.
Release global block.
Display help about using this command.

Example

# Create a function that listens for events
function --on-event foo foo; echo 'foo fired'; end
# Block the delivery of events
block -g
emit foo
# No output will be produced
block -e
# 'foo fired' will now be printed


Notes

Events are only received from the current fish process as there is no way to send events from one fish process to another.

break - stop the current inner loop

Synopsis

LOOP_CONSTRUCT

[COMMANDS ...]
break
[COMMANDS ...] end

Description

break halts a currently running loop (LOOP_CONSTRUCT), such as a for or while loop. It is usually added inside of a conditional block such as an if block.

There are no parameters for break.

Example

The following code searches all .c files for "smurf", and halts at the first occurrence.

for i in *.c

if grep smurf $i
echo Smurfs are present in $i
break
end end


See Also

the continue command, to skip the remainder of the current iteration of the current inner loop

breakpoint - launch debug mode

Synopsis

breakpoint

Description

breakpoint is used to halt a running script and launch an interactive debugging prompt.

For more details, see Debugging fish scripts in the fish manual.

There are no parameters for breakpoint.

builtin - run a builtin command

Synopsis

builtin [OPTIONS] BUILTINNAME
builtin --query BUILTINNAME ...
builtin --names

Description

builtin forces the shell to use a builtin command named BUILTIN, rather than a function or external program.

The following options are available:

Lists the names of all defined builtins.
Tests if any of the specified builtins exist. If any exist, it returns 0, 1 otherwise.
Displays help about using this command.

Example

builtin jobs
# executes the jobs builtin, even if a function named jobs exists


case - conditionally execute a block of commands

Synopsis

switch VALUE

[case [GLOB ...]
[COMMAND ...]] end

Description

switch executes one of several blocks of commands, depending on whether a specified value matches one of several values. case is used together with the switch statement in order to determine which block should be executed.

Each case command is given one or more parameters. The first case command with a parameter that matches the string specified in the switch command will be evaluated. case parameters may contain wildcards. These need to be escaped or quoted in order to avoid regular wildcard expansion using filenames.

Note that fish does not fall through on case statements. Only the first matching case is executed.

Note that command substitutions in a case statement will be evaluated even if its body is not taken. All substitutions, including command substitutions, must be performed before the value can be compared against the parameter.

Example

Say $animal contains the name of an animal. Then this code would classify it:

switch $animal

case cat
echo evil
case wolf dog human moose dolphin whale
echo mammal
case duck goose albatross
echo bird
case shark trout stingray
echo fish
# Note that the next case has a wildcard which is quoted
case '*'
echo I have no idea what a $animal is end


If the above code was run with $animal set to whale, the output would be mammal.

If $animal was set to "banana", it would print "I have no idea what a banana is".

cd - change directory

Synopsis

cd [DIRECTORY]

Description

NOTE: This page documents the fish builtin cd. To see the documentation on any non-fish versions, use command man cd.

cd changes the current working directory.

If DIRECTORY is given, it will become the new directory. If no parameter is given, the HOME environment variable will be used.

If DIRECTORY is a relative path, all the paths in the CDPATH will be tried as prefixes for it, in addition to PWD. It is recommended to keep . as the first element of CDPATH, or PWD will be tried last.

Fish will also try to change directory if given a command that looks like a directory (starting with ., / or ~, or ending with /), without explicitly requiring cd.

Fish also ships a wrapper function around the builtin cd that understands cd - as changing to the previous directory. See also prevd. This wrapper function maintains a history of the 25 most recently visited directories in the $dirprev and $dirnext global variables. If you make those universal variables your cd history is shared among all fish instances.

As a special case, cd . is equivalent to cd $PWD, which is useful in cases where a mountpoint has been recycled or a directory has been removed and recreated.

The --help or -h option displays help about using this command, and does not change the directory.

Examples

cd
# changes the working directory to your home directory.
cd /usr/src/fish-shell
# changes the working directory to /usr/src/fish-shell


See Also

Navigate directories using the directory history or the directory stack

cdh - change to a recently visited directory

Synopsis

cdh [DIRECTORY]

Description

cdh with no arguments presents a list of recently visited directories. You can then select one of the entries by letter or number. You can also press tab to use the completion pager to select an item from the list. If you give it a single argument it is equivalent to cd DIRECTORY.

Note that the cd command limits directory history to the 25 most recently visited directories. The history is stored in the dirprev and dirnext variables, which this command manipulates. If you make those universal variables, your cd history is shared among all fish instances.

See Also

  • the dirh command to print the directory history
  • the prevd command to move backward
  • the nextd command to move forward

command - run a program

Synopsis

command [OPTIONS] [COMMANDNAME [ARG ...]]

Description

NOTE: This page documents the fish builtin command. To see the documentation on any non-fish versions, use command man command.

command forces the shell to execute the program COMMANDNAME and ignore any functions or builtins with the same name.

In command foo, command is a keyword.

The following options are available:

Prints all COMMAND found in PATH, in the order found.
Return 0 if any of the given commands could be found, 127 otherwise. Don't print anything. For compatibility, this is also --quiet (deprecated).
Prints the external command that would be executed, or prints nothing if no file with the specified name could be found in PATH.
Displays help about using this command.

Examples

command ls executes the ls program, even if an ls function also exists.
command -s ls prints the path to the ls program.
command -q git; and command git log runs git log only if git exists.
command -sq git and command -q git and command -vq git return true (0) if a git command could be found and don't print anything.

commandline - set or get the current command line buffer

Synopsis

commandline [OPTIONS] [CMD]

Description

commandline can be used to set or get the current contents of the command line buffer.

With no parameters, commandline returns the current value of the command line.

With CMD specified, the command line buffer is erased and replaced with the contents of CMD.

The following options are available:

Set or get the current cursor position, not the contents of the buffer. If no argument is given, the current cursor position is printed, otherwise the argument is interpreted as the new cursor position. If one of the options -j, -p or -t is given, the position is relative to the respective substring instead of the entire command line buffer.
Get current position of the selection start in the buffer.
Get current position of the selection end in the buffer.
Causes any additional arguments to be interpreted as input functions, and puts them into the queue, so that they will be read before any additional actual key presses are. This option cannot be combined with any other option. See bind for a list of input functions.
Displays help about using this command.

The following options change the way commandline updates the command line buffer:

Do not remove the current commandline, append the specified string at the end of it.
Do not remove the current commandline, insert the specified string at the current cursor position
Remove the current commandline and replace it with the specified string (default)

The following options change what part of the commandline is printed or updated:

Select the entire commandline, not including any displayed autosuggestion (default).
Select the current job - a job here is one pipeline. Stops at logical operators or terminators (;, &, and newlines).
Select the current process - a process here is one command. Stops at logical operators, terminators, and pipes.
Selects the current selection
Selects the current token
Use the pager search field instead of the command line. Returns false is the search field is not shown.

The following options change the way commandline prints the current commandline buffer:

Only print selection up until the current cursor position. If combined with --tokens-expanded, this will print up until the last completed token - excluding the token the cursor is in. This is typically what you would want for instance in completions. To get both, use both commandline --cut-at-cursor --tokens-expanded; commandline --cut-at-cursor --current-token, or commandline -cx; commandline -ct for short.
Perform argument expansion on the selection and print one argument per line. Command substitutions are not expanded but forwarded as-is.
Print arguments in the selection as they appear on the command line, one per line.
Deprecated; do not use.

If commandline is called during a call to complete a given string using complete -C STRING, commandline will consider the specified string to be the current contents of the command line.

The following options output metadata about the commandline state:

If no argument is given, print the line that the cursor is on, with the topmost line starting at 1. Otherwise, set the cursor to the given line.
If no argument is given, print the 1-based offset from the start of the line to the cursor position in Unicode code points. Otherwise, set the cursor to the given code point offset.
Evaluates to true if the commandline is performing a history search.
Evaluates to true if the commandline is showing pager contents, such as tab completions.
Evaluates to true if the commandline is showing pager contents, such as tab completions and all lines are shown (no "<n> more rows" message).
Returns true when the commandline is syntactically valid and complete. If it is, it would be executed when the execute bind function is called. If the commandline is incomplete, return 2, if erroneus, return 1.
Evaluates to true (i.e. returns 0) when the shell is currently showing an automatic history completion/suggestion, available to be consumed via one of the forward- bindings. For example, can be used to determine if moving the cursor to the right when already at the end of the line would have no effect or if it would cause a completion to be accepted (note that forward-char-passive does this automatically).

Example

commandline -j $history[3] replaces the job under the cursor with the third item from the command line history.

If the commandline contains

>_ echo $flounder >&2 | less; and echo $catfish


(with the cursor on the "o" of "flounder")

The echo $flounder >& is the first process, less the second and and echo $catfish the third.

echo $flounder >&2 | less is the first job, and echo $catfish the second.

$flounder is the current token.

The most common use for something like completions is

set -l tokens (commandline -xpc)


which gives the current process (what is being completed), tokenized into separate entries, up to but excluding the currently being completed token

If you are then also interested in the in-progress token, add

set -l current (commandline -ct)


Note that this makes it easy to render fish's infix matching moot - if possible it's best if the completions just print all possibilities and leave the matching to the current token up to fish's logic.

More examples:

>_ commandline -t
$flounder
>_ commandline -ct
$fl
>_ commandline -b # or just commandline
echo $flounder >&2 | less; and echo $catfish
>_ commandline -p
echo $flounder >&2
>_ commandline -j
echo $flounder >&2 | less


complete - edit command-specific tab-completions

Synopsis

complete ((-c | --command) | (-p | --path)) COMMAND [OPTIONS]
complete (-C | --do-complete) [--escape] STRING

Description

complete defines, removes or lists completions for a command.

For an introduction to writing your own completions, see Writing your own completions in the fish manual.

The following options are available:

Specifies that COMMAND is the name of the command. If there is no -c or -p, one non-option argument will be used as the command.
Specifies that COMMAND is the absolute path of the command (optionally containing wildcards).
Deletes the specified completion.
Adds a short option to the completions list.
Adds a GNU-style long option to the completions list.
Adds an old-style short or long option (see below for details).
Adds the specified option arguments to the completions list.
Keeps the order of ARGUMENTS instead of sorting alphabetically. Multiple complete calls with -k result in arguments of the later ones displayed first.
This completion may not be followed by a filename.
This completion may be followed by a filename, even if another applicable complete specified --no-files.
This completion must have an option argument, i.e. may not be followed by another option. This means that the next argument is the argument to the option. If this is not given, the option argument must be attached like -xFoo or --color=auto.
Short for -r and -f.
Add a description for this completion, to be shown in the completion pager.
Causes the specified command to inherit completions from WRAPPED_COMMAND (see below for details).
This completion should only be used if the CONDITION (a shell command) returns 0. This makes it possible to specify completions that should only be used in some cases. If multiple conditions are specified, fish will try them in the order they are specified until one fails or all succeeded.
Makes complete try to find all possible completions for the specified string. If there is no STRING, the current commandline is used instead.
When used with -C, escape special characters in completions.
Displays help about using this command.

Command-specific tab-completions in fish are based on the notion of options and arguments. An option is a parameter which begins with a hyphen, such as -h, -help or --help. Arguments are parameters that do not begin with a hyphen. Fish recognizes three styles of options, the same styles as the GNU getopt library. These styles are:

  • Short options, like -a. Short options are a single character long, are preceded by a single hyphen and can be grouped together (like -la, which is equivalent to -l -a). Option arguments may be specified by appending the option with the value (-w32), or, if --require-parameter is given, in the following parameter (-w 32).
  • Old-style options, long like -Wall or -name or even short like -a. Old-style options can be more than one character long, are preceded by a single hyphen and may not be grouped together. Option arguments are specified by default following a space (-foo null) or after = (-foo=null).
  • GNU-style long options, like --colors. GNU-style long options can be more than one character long, are preceded by two hyphens, and can't be grouped together. Option arguments may be specified after a = (--quoting-style=shell), or, if --require-parameter is given, in the following parameter (--quoting-style shell).

Multiple commands and paths can be given in one call to define the same completions for multiple commands.

Multiple command switches and wrapped commands can also be given to define multiple completions in one call.

Invoking complete multiple times for the same command adds the new definitions on top of any existing completions defined for the command.

When -a or --arguments is specified in conjunction with long, short, or old-style options, the specified arguments are only completed as arguments for any of the specified options. If -a or --arguments is specified without any long, short, or old-style options, the specified arguments are used when completing non-option arguments to the command (except when completing an option argument that was specified with -r or --require-parameter).

Command substitutions found in ARGUMENTS should return a newline-separated list of arguments, and each argument may optionally have a tab character followed by the argument description. Description given this way override a description given with -d or --description.

Descriptions given with --description are also used to group options given with -s, -o or -l. Options with the same (non-empty) description will be listed as one candidate, and one of them will be picked. If the description is empty or no description was given this is skipped.

The -w or --wraps options causes the specified command to inherit completions from another command, "wrapping" the other command. The wrapping command can also have additional completions. A command can wrap multiple commands, and wrapping is transitive: if A wraps B, and B wraps C, then A automatically inherits all of C's completions. Wrapping can be removed using the -e or --erase options. Wrapping only works for completions specified with -c or --command and are ignored when specifying completions with -p or --path.

When erasing completions, it is possible to either erase all completions for a specific command by specifying complete -c COMMAND -e, or by specifying a specific completion option to delete.

When complete is called without anything that would define or erase completions (options, arguments, wrapping, ...), it shows matching completions instead. So complete without any arguments shows all loaded completions, complete -c foo shows all loaded completions for foo. Since completions are autoloaded, you will have to trigger them first.

Examples

The short-style option -o for the gcc command needs a file argument:

complete -c gcc -s o -r


The short-style option -d for the grep command requires one of read, skip or recurse:

complete -c grep -s d -x -a "read skip recurse"


The su command takes any username as an argument. Usernames are given as the first colon-separated field in the file /etc/passwd. This can be specified as:

complete -x -c su -d "Username" -a "(cat /etc/passwd | cut -d : -f 1)"


The rpm command has several different modes. If the -e or --erase flag has been specified, rpm should delete one or more packages, in which case several switches related to deleting packages are valid, like the nodeps switch.

This can be written as:

complete -c rpm -n "__fish_contains_opt -s e erase" -l nodeps -d "Don't check dependencies"


where __fish_contains_opt is a function that checks the command line buffer for the presence of a specified set of options.

To implement an alias, use the -w or --wraps option:

complete -c hub -w git


Now hub inherits all of the completions from git. Note this can also be specified in a function declaration (function thing -w otherthing).

complete -c git


Shows all completions for git.

Any command foo that doesn't support grouping multiple short options in one string (not supporting -xf as short for -x -f) or a short option and its value in one string (not supporting -d9 instead of -d 9) should be specified as a single-character old-style option instead of as a short-style option; for example, complete -c foo -o s; complete -c foo -o v would never suggest foo -ov but rather foo -o -v.

contains - test if a word is present in a list

Synopsis

contains [OPTIONS] KEY [VALUES ...]

Description

contains tests whether the set VALUES contains the string KEY. If so, contains exits with code 0; if not, it exits with code 1.

The following options are available:

Print the index (number of the element in the set) of the first matching element.
Displays help about using this command.

Note that contains interprets all arguments starting with a - as an option to contains, until an -- argument is reached.

See the examples below.

Example

If animals is a list of animals, the following will test if animals contains "cat":

if contains cat $animals

echo Your animal list is evil! end


This code will add some directories to PATH if they aren't yet included:

for i in ~/bin /usr/local/bin

if not contains $i $PATH
set PATH $PATH $i
end end


While this will check if function hasargs is being ran with the -q option:

function hasargs

if contains -- -q $argv
echo '$argv contains a -q option'
end end


The -- here stops contains from treating -q to an option to itself. Instead it treats it as a normal string to check.

continue - skip the remainder of the current iteration of the current inner loop

Synopsis

LOOP_CONSTRUCT; [COMMANDS ...;] continue; [COMMANDS ...;] end

Description

continue skips the remainder of the current iteration of the current inner loop, such as a for loop or a while loop. It is usually added inside of a conditional block such as an if statement or a switch statement.

Example

The following code removes all tmp files that do not contain the word smurf.

for i in *.tmp

if grep smurf $i
continue
end
# This "rm" is skipped over if "continue" is executed.
rm $i
# As is this "echo"
echo $i end


See Also

the break command, to stop the current inner loop

count - count the number of elements of a list

Synopsis

count STRING1 STRING2 ...
COMMAND | count
count [...] < FILE

Description

count prints the number of arguments that were passed to it, plus the number of newlines passed to it via stdin. This is usually used to find out how many elements an environment variable list contains, or how many lines there are in a text file.

count does not accept any options, not even -h or --help.

count exits with a non-zero exit status if no arguments were passed to it, and with zero if at least one argument was passed.

Note that, like wc -l, reading from stdin counts newlines, so echo -n foo | count will print 0.

Example

count $PATH
# Returns the number of directories in the users PATH variable.
count *.txt
# Returns the number of files in the current working directory
# ending with the suffix '.txt'.
git ls-files --others --exclude-standard | count
# Returns the number of untracked files in a git repository
printf '%s\n' foo bar | count baz
# Returns 3 (2 lines from stdin plus 1 argument)
count < /etc/hosts
# Counts the number of entries in the hosts file


dirh - print directory history

Synopsis

dirh

Description

dirh prints the current directory history. The current position in the history is highlighted using the color defined in the fish_color_history_current environment variable.

dirh does not accept any parameters.

Note that the cd command limits directory history to the 25 most recently visited directories. The history is stored in the $dirprev and $dirnext variables.

See Also

  • the cdh command to display a prompt to quickly navigate the history
  • the prevd command to move backward
  • the nextd command to move forward

dirs - print directory stack

Synopsis

dirs [-c]

Description

dirs prints the current directory stack, as created by pushd and modified by popd.

The following options are available:

Clear the directory stack instead of printing it.
Displays help about using this command.

dirs does not accept any arguments.

See Also

the cdh command, which provides a more intuitive way to navigate to recently visited directories.

disown - remove a process from the list of jobs

Synopsis

disown [PID ...]

Description

disown removes the specified job from the list of jobs. The job itself continues to exist, but fish does not keep track of it any longer. This will make fish lose all knowledge of the job, so functions defined with --on-process-exit or --on-job-exit will no longer fire.

Jobs in the list of jobs are sent a hang-up signal when fish terminates, which usually causes the job to terminate; disown allows these processes to continue regardless.

If no process is specified, the most recently-used job is removed (like bg and fg). If one or more PIDs are specified, jobs with the specified process IDs are removed from the job list. Invalid jobs are ignored and a warning is printed.

If a job is stopped, it is sent a signal to continue running, and a warning is printed. It is not possible to use the bg builtin to continue a job once it has been disowned.

disown returns 0 if all specified jobs were disowned successfully, and 1 if any problems were encountered.

The --help or -h option displays help about using this command.

Example

firefox &; disown will start the Firefox web browser in the background and remove it from the job list, meaning it will not be closed when the fish process is closed.

disown (jobs -p) removes all jobs from the job list without terminating them.

echo - display a line of text

Synopsis

echo [OPTIONS] [STRING]

Description

NOTE: This page documents the fish builtin echo. To see the documentation on any non-fish versions, use command man echo.

echo displays STRING of text.

The following options are available:

Do not output a newline.
Do not separate arguments with spaces.
Disable interpretation of backslash escapes (default).
Enable interpretation of backslash escapes.

Unlike other shells, this echo accepts -- to signal the end of the options.

Escape Sequences

If -e is used, the following sequences are recognized:

  • \ backslash
  • \a alert (BEL)
  • \b backspace
  • \c produce no further output
  • \e escape
  • \f form feed
  • \n new line
  • \r carriage return
  • \t horizontal tab
  • \v vertical tab
  • \0NNN byte with octal value NNN (1 to 3 digits)
  • \xHH byte with hexadecimal value HH (1 to 2 digits)

Example

> echo 'Hello World'
Hello World
> echo -e 'Top\nBottom'
Top
Bottom
> echo -- -n
-n


See Also

the printf command, for more control over output formatting

else - execute command if a condition is not met

Synopsis

if CONDITION; COMMANDS_TRUE ...; [else; COMMANDS_FALSE ...;] end

Description

if will execute the command CONDITION*. If the condition's exit status is 0, the commands COMMANDS_TRUE will execute. If it is not 0 and else is given, COMMANDS_FALSE will be executed.

Example

The following code tests whether a file foo.txt exists as a regular file.

if test -f foo.txt

echo foo.txt exists else
echo foo.txt does not exist end


emit - emit a generic event

Synopsis

emit EVENT_NAME [ARGUMENTS ...]

Description

emit emits, or fires, an event. Events are delivered to, or caught by, special functions called event handlers. The arguments are passed to the event handlers as function arguments.

The --help or -h option displays help about using this command.

Example

The following code first defines an event handler for the generic event named 'test_event', and then emits an event of that type.

function event_test --on-event test_event

echo event test: $argv end emit test_event something


Notes

Note that events are only sent to the current fish process as there is no way to send events from one fish process to another.

end - end a block of commands

Synopsis

begin

[COMMANDS ...] end

function NAME [OPTIONS]; COMMANDS ...; end
if CONDITION; COMMANDS_TRUE ...; [else; COMMANDS_FALSE ...;] end
switch VALUE; [case [WILDCARD ...]; [COMMANDS ...]; ...] end
while CONDITION; COMMANDS ...; end
for VARNAME in [VALUES ...]; COMMANDS ...; end

Description

The end keyword ends a block of commands started by one of the following commands:

  • begin to start a block of commands
  • function to define a function
  • if, switch to conditionally execute commands
  • while, for to perform commands multiple times

The end keyword does not change the current exit status. Instead, the status after it will be the status returned by the most recent command.

eval - evaluate the specified commands

Synopsis

eval [COMMANDS ...]

Description

eval evaluates the specified parameters as a command. If more than one parameter is specified, all parameters will be joined using a space character as a separator.

If the command does not need access to stdin, consider using source instead.

If no piping or other compound shell constructs are required, variable-expansion-as-command, as in set cmd ls -la; $cmd, is also an option.

Example

The following code will call the ls command and truncate each filename to the first 12 characters.

set cmd ls \| cut -c 1-12
eval $cmd


exec - execute command in current process

Synopsis

exec COMMAND

Description

NOTE: This page documents the fish builtin exec. To see the documentation on any non-fish versions, use command man exec.

exec replaces the currently running shell with a new command. On successful completion, exec never returns. exec cannot be used inside a pipeline.

The --help or -h option displays help about using this command.

Example

exec emacs starts up the emacs text editor, and exits fish. When emacs exits, the session will terminate.

exit - exit the shell

Synopsis

exit [CODE]

Description

exit is a special builtin that causes the shell to exit. Either 255 or the CODE supplied is used, whichever is lesser. Otherwise, the exit status will be that of the last command executed.

If exit is called while sourcing a file (using the source builtin) the rest of the file will be skipped, but the shell itself will not exit.

The --help or -h option displays help about using this command.

export - compatibility function for exporting variables

Synopsis

export
export NAME=VALUE

Description

export is a function included for compatibility with POSIX shells. In general, the set builtin should be used instead.

When called without arguments, export prints a list of currently-exported variables, like set -x.

When called with a NAME=VALUE pair, the variable NAME is set to VALUE in the global scope, and exported as an environment variable to other commands.

There are no options available.

Example

The following commands have an identical effect.

set -gx PAGER bat
export PAGER=bat


Note: If you want to add to e.g. $PATH, you need to be careful to combine the list. Quote it, like so:

export PATH="$PATH:/opt/bin"


Or just use set, which avoids this:

set -gx PATH $PATH /opt/bin


See more

1.
The set command.

false - return an unsuccessful result

Synopsis

false

Description

false sets the exit status to 1.

See Also

  • true command
  • $status variable

fg - bring job to foreground

Synopsis

fg [PID]

Description

The fg builtin brings the specified job to the foreground, resuming it if it is stopped. While a foreground job is executed, fish is suspended. If no job is specified, the last job to be used is put in the foreground. If PID is specified, the job containing a process with the specified process ID is put in the foreground.

For compatibility with other shells, job expansion syntax is supported for fg. A PID of the format %1 will foreground job 1. Job numbers can be seen in the output of jobs.

The --help or -h option displays help about using this command.

Example

fg will put the last job in the foreground.

fg %3 will put job 3 into the foreground.

fish - the friendly interactive shell

Synopsis

fish [OPTIONS] [FILE [ARG ...]]
fish [OPTIONS] [-c COMMAND [ARG ...]]

Description

fish is a command-line shell written mainly with interactive use in mind. This page briefly describes the options for invoking fish. The full manual is available in HTML by using the help command from inside fish, and in the fish-doc(1) man page. The tutorial is available as HTML via help tutorial or in man fish-tutorial.

The following options are available:

Evaluate the specified commands instead of reading from the commandline, passing additional positional arguments through $argv.
Evaluate specified commands after reading the configuration but before executing command specified by -c or reading interactive input.
Enables debug output and specify a pattern for matching debug categories. See Debugging below for details.
Specifies a file path to receive the debug output, including categories and fish_trace. The default is stderr.
The shell is interactive.
When built as self-installable (via cargo), this will unpack fish's datafiles and place them in ~/.local/share/fish/install/. Fish will also ask to do this automatically when run interactively.
Act as if invoked as a login shell.
Do not read configuration files.
Do not execute any commands, only perform syntax checking.
when fish exits, output timing information on all executed commands to the specified file. This excludes time spent starting up and reading the configuration.
Will write timing for fish startup to specified file.
Enables private mode: fish will not access old or store new history.
When fish exits, output stats from getrusage.
Print all debug categories, and then exit.
Print version and exit.
Enables one or more comma-separated feature flags.

The fish exit status is generally the exit status of the last foreground command.

Debugging

While fish provides extensive support for debugging fish scripts, it is also possible to debug and instrument its internals. Debugging can be enabled by passing the --debug option. For example, the following command turns on debugging for background IO thread events, in addition to the default categories, i.e. debug, error, warning, and warning-path:

> fish --debug=iothread


Available categories are listed by fish --print-debug-categories. The --debug option accepts a comma-separated list of categories, and supports glob syntax. The following command turns on debugging for complete, history, history-file, and profile-history, as well as the default categories:

> fish --debug='complete,*history*'


Debug messages output to stderr by default. Note that if fish_trace is set, execution tracing also outputs to stderr by default. You can output to a file using the --debug-output option:

> fish --debug='complete,*history*' --debug-output=/tmp/fish.log --init-command='set fish_trace on'


These options can also be changed via the FISH_DEBUG and FISH_DEBUG_OUTPUT variables. The categories enabled via --debug are added to the ones enabled by $FISH_DEBUG, so they can be disabled by prefixing them with - (reader-*,-ast* enables reader debugging and disables ast debugging).

The file given in --debug-output takes precedence over the file in FISH_DEBUG_OUTPUT.

fish_add_path - add to the path

Synopsis

fish_add_path path ...
fish_add_path [(-g | --global) | (-U | --universal) | (-P | --path)] [(-m | --move)] [(-a | --append) | (-p | --prepend)] [(-v | --verbose) | (-n | --dry-run)] PATHS ...

Description

fish_add_path is a simple way to add more directories to fish's PATH. It does this by adding the directories either to fish_user_paths or directly to PATH (if the --path switch is given).

It is (by default) safe to use fish_add_path in config.fish, or it can be used once, interactively, and the paths will stay in future because of universal variables. This is a "do what I mean" style command - it tries to do the right thing by default, and follow your lead on what you have already set up (e.g. by using a global fish_user_paths if you have that already). If you need more control, consider modifying the variable yourself.

Directories are normalized with realpath. Trailing slashes are ignored and relative paths are made absolute (but symlinks are not resolved). If a directory is already included, it is not added again and stays in the same place unless the --move switch is given.

Directories are added in the order they are given, and they are prepended to the path unless --append is given. If $fish_user_paths is used, that means they are last in $fish_user_paths, which is itself prepended to PATH, so they still stay ahead of the system paths. If the --path option is used, the paths are appended/prepended to PATH directly, so this doesn't happen.

With --path, because PATH must be a global variable instead of a universal one, the changes won't persist, so those calls need to be stored in config.fish. This also applies to fish_user_paths if you make it global (for instance by passing --global).

If no directory is new, the variable (fish_user_paths or PATH) is not set again or otherwise modified, so variable handlers are not triggered.

If an argument is not an existing directory, fish_add_path ignores it.

Options

Add directories to the end of the variable.
Add directories to the front of the variable (this is the default).
Use a global fish_user_paths.
Use a universal fish_user_paths - this is the default if it doesn't already exist.
Manipulate PATH directly.
Move already-included directories to the place they would be added - by default they would be left in place and not added again.
Print the set command used, and some more warnings, like when a path is skipped because it doesn't exist or is not a directory. Verbose mode is automatically enabled when fish_add_path is used interactively and the output goes to the terminal.
Print the set command that would be used without executing it.
Displays help about using this command.

If --move is used, it may of course lead to the path swapping order, so you should be careful doing that in config.fish.

Example

# I just installed mycoolthing and need to add it to the path to use it.
# It is at /opt/mycoolthing/bin/mycoolthing,
# so let's add the directory: /opt/mycoolthing/bin.
> fish_add_path /opt/mycoolthing/bin
# I want my ~/.local/bin to be checked first,
# even if it was already added.
> fish_add_path -m ~/.local/bin
# I prefer using a global fish_user_paths
# This isn't saved automatically, I need to add this to config.fish
# if I want it to stay.
> fish_add_path -g ~/.local/bin ~/.otherbin /usr/local/sbin
# I want to append to the entire $PATH because this directory contains fallbacks
# This needs --path/-P because otherwise it appends to $fish_user_paths,
# which is added to the front of $PATH.
> fish_add_path --append --path /opt/fallback/bin
# I want to add the bin/ directory of my current $PWD (say /home/nemo/)
# -v/--verbose shows what fish_add_path did.
> fish_add_path -v bin/
set fish_user_paths /home/nemo/bin /usr/bin /home/nemo/.local/bin
# I have installed ruby via homebrew
> fish_add_path /usr/local/opt/ruby/bin


fish_breakpoint_prompt - define the prompt when stopped at a breakpoint

Synopsis

fish_breakpoint_prompt

function fish_breakpoint_prompt

... end


Description

fish_breakpoint_prompt is the prompt function when asking for input in response to a breakpoint command.

The exit status of commands within fish_breakpoint_prompt will not modify the value of $status outside of the fish_breakpoint_prompt function.

fish ships with a default version of this function that displays the function name and line number of the current execution context.

Example

A simple prompt that is a simplified version of the default debugging prompt:

function fish_breakpoint_prompt -d "Write out the debug prompt"

set -l function (status current-function)
set -l line (status current-line-number)
set -l prompt "$function:$line >"
echo -ns (set_color $fish_color_status) "BP $prompt" (set_color normal) ' ' end


fish_clipboard_copy - copy text to the system's clipboard

Synopsis

fish_clipboard_copy
foo | fish_clipboard_copy

Description

The fish_clipboard_copy function copies text to the system clipboard.

If stdin is not a terminal (see isatty), it will read all input from there and copy it. If it is, it will use the current commandline, or the current selection if there is one.

It is bound to ctrl-x by default.

fish_clipboard_copy works by calling a system-specific backend. If it doesn't appear to work you may need to install yours.

Currently supported are:

  • pbcopy
  • wl-copy using wayland
  • xsel and xclip for X11
  • clip.exe on Windows.

See also

fish_clipboard_paste - get text from the system's clipboard which does the inverse.

fish_clipboard_paste - get text from the system's clipboard

Synopsis

fish_clipboard_paste
fish_clipboard_paste | foo

Description

The fish_clipboard_paste function copies text from the system clipboard.

If its stdout is not a terminal (see isatty), it will output everything there, as-is, without any additional newlines. If it is, it will put the text in the commandline instead.

If it outputs to the commandline, it will automatically escape the output if the cursor is currently inside single-quotes so it is suitable for single-quotes (meaning it escapes ' and \\).

It is bound to ctrl-v by default.

fish_clipboard_paste works by calling a system-specific backend. If it doesn't appear to work you may need to install yours.

Currently supported are:

  • pbpaste
  • wl-paste using wayland
  • xsel and xclip for X11
  • powershell.exe on Windows (this backend has encoding limitations and uses windows line endings that fish_clipboard_paste undoes)

See also

fish_clipboard_copy - copy text to the system's clipboard which does the inverse.

fish_command_not_found - what to do when a command wasn't found

Synopsis

function fish_command_not_found

... end

Description

When fish tries to execute a command and can't find it, it invokes this function.

It can print a message to tell you about it, and it often also checks for a missing package that would include the command.

Fish ships multiple handlers for various operating systems and chooses from them when this function is loaded, or you can define your own.

It receives the full commandline as one argument per token, so $argv[1] contains the missing command.

When you leave fish_command_not_found undefined (e.g. by adding an empty function file) or explicitly call __fish_default_command_not_found_handler, fish will just print a simple error.

Example

A simple handler:

function fish_command_not_found

echo Did not find command $argv[1] end > flounder Did not find command flounder


Or the handler for OpenSUSE's command-not-found:

function fish_command_not_found

/usr/bin/command-not-found $argv[1] end


Or the simple default handler:

function fish_command_not_found

__fish_default_command_not_found_handler $argv end


Backwards compatibility

This command was introduced in fish 3.2.0. Previous versions of fish used the "fish_command_not_found" event instead.

To define a handler that works in older versions of fish as well, define it the old way:

function __fish_command_not_found_handler --on-event fish_command_not_found

echo COMMAND WAS NOT FOUND MY FRIEND $argv[1] end


in which case fish will define a fish_command_not_found that calls it, or define a wrapper:

function fish_command_not_found

echo "G'day mate, could not find your command: $argv" end function __fish_command_not_found_handler --on-event fish_command_not_found
fish_command_not_found $argv end


fish_config - start the web-based configuration interface

Synopsis

fish_config [browse]
fish_config prompt (choose | list | save | show)
fish_config theme (choose | demo | dump | list | save | show)

Description

fish_config is used to configure fish.

Without arguments or with the browse command it starts the web-based configuration interface. The web interface allows you to view your functions, variables and history, and to make changes to your prompt and color configuration. It starts a local web server and opens a browser window. When you are finished, close the browser window and press the Enter key to terminate the configuration session.

If the BROWSER environment variable is set, it will be used as the name of the web browser to open instead of the system default.

With the prompt command fish_config can be used to view and choose a prompt from fish's sample prompts inside the terminal directly.

Available subcommands for the prompt command:

  • choose loads a sample prompt in the current session.
  • list lists the names of the available sample prompts.
  • save saves the current prompt to a file (via funcsave).
  • show shows what the given sample prompts (or all) would look like.

With the theme command fish_config can be used to view and choose a theme (meaning a color scheme) inside the terminal.

Available subcommands for the theme command:

  • choose loads a sample theme in the current session.
  • demo displays some sample text in the current theme.
  • dump prints the current theme in a loadable format.
  • list lists the names of the available sample themes.
  • save saves the given theme to universal variables.
  • show shows what the given sample theme (or all) would look like.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Theme Files

fish_config theme and the theme selector in the web config tool load their themes from theme files. These are stored in the fish configuration directory, typically ~/.config/fish/themes, with a .theme ending.

You can add your own theme by adding a file in that directory.

To get started quickly:

fish_config theme dump > ~/.config/fish/themes/my.theme


which will save your current theme in .theme format.

The format looks like this:

# name: 'Cool Beans'
# preferred_background: black
fish_color_autosuggestion 666
fish_color_cancel -r
fish_color_command normal
fish_color_comment '888'  '--italics'
fish_color_cwd 0A0
fish_color_cwd_root A00
fish_color_end 009900


The two comments at the beginning are the name and background that the web config tool shows.

The other lines are just like set variable value, except that no expansions are allowed. Quotes are, but aren't necessary.

Any color variable fish knows about that the theme doesn't set will be set to empty when it is loaded, so the old theme is completely overwritten.

Other than that, .theme files can contain any variable with a name that matches the regular expression '^fish_(?:pager_)?color.*$' - starts with fish_, an optional pager_, then color and then anything.

Example

fish_config or fish_config browse opens a new web browser window and allows you to configure certain fish settings.

fish_config prompt show demos the available sample prompts.

fish_config prompt choose disco makes the disco prompt the prompt for the current session. This can also be used in config.fish to set the prompt.

fish_config prompt save saves the current prompt to an autoloaded file.

fish_config prompt save default chooses the default prompt and saves it.

fish_default_key_bindings - set emacs key bindings for fish

Synopsis

fish_default_key_bindings

Description

fish_default_key_bindings sets the emacs key bindings for fish shell.

Some of the Emacs key bindings are defined here.

There are no parameters for fish_default_key_bindings.

Examples

To start using emacs key bindings:

fish_default_key_bindings


fish_delta - compare functions and completions to the default

Synopsis

fish_delta name ...
fish_delta [-f | --no-functions] [-c | --no-completions] [-C | --no-config] [-d | --no-diff] [-n | --new] [-V | --vendor=]
fish_delta [-h | --help]

Description

The fish_delta function tells you, at a glance, which of your functions and completions differ from the set that fish ships.

It does this by going through the relevant variables (fish_function_path for functions and fish_complete_path for completions) and comparing the files against fish's default directories.

If any names are given, it will only compare files by those names (plus a ".fish" extension).

By default, it will also use diff to display the difference between the files. If diff is unavailable, it will skip it, but in that case it also cannot figure out if the files really differ.

The exit status is 1 if there was a difference and 2 for other errors, otherwise 0.

Options

The following options are available:

Stops checking functions
Stops checking completions
Stops checking configuration files like config.fish or snippets in the conf.d directories.
Removes the diff display (this happens automatically if diff can't be found)
Also prints new files (i.e. those that can't be found in fish's default directories).
Determines how the vendor directories are counted. Valid values are:
  • "default" - counts vendor files as belonging to the defaults. Any changes in other directories will be counted as changes over them. This is the default.
  • "user" - counts vendor files as belonging to the user files. Any changes in them will be counted as new or changed files.
  • "ignore" - ignores vendor directories. Files of the same name will be counted as "new" if no file of the same name in fish's default directories exists.

Prints fish_delta's help (this).

Example

Running just:

fish_delta


will give you a list of all your changed functions and completions, including diffs (if you have the diff command).

It might look like this:

> fish_delta
New: /home/alfa/.config/fish/functions/battery.fish
Changed: /home/alfa/.config/fish/test/completions/cargo.fish
--- /home/alfa/.config/fish/test/completions/cargo.fish 2022-09-02 12:57:55.579229959 +0200
+++ /usr/share/fish/completions/cargo.fish      2022-09-25 17:51:53.000000000 +0200
# the output of `diff` follows


The options are there to select which parts of the output you want. With --no-completions you can compare just functions, and with --no-diff you can turn off the diff display.

To only compare your fish_git_prompt, you might use:

fish_delta --no-completions fish_git_prompt


which will only compare files called "fish_git_prompt.fish".

fish_git_prompt - output git information for use in a prompt

Synopsis

fish_git_prompt

function fish_prompt

printf '%s' $PWD (fish_git_prompt) ' $ ' end


Description

The fish_git_prompt function displays information about the current git repository, if any.

Git <https://git-scm.com> must be installed.

There are numerous customization options, which can be controlled with git options or fish variables. git options, where available, take precedence over the fish variable with the same function. git options can be set on a per-repository or global basis. git options can be set with the git config command, while fish variables can be set as usual with the set command.

Boolean options (those which enable or disable something) understand "1", "yes" or "true" to mean true and every other value to mean false.

  • $__fish_git_prompt_show_informative_status or the git option bash.showInformativeStatus can be set to 1, true or yes to enable the "informative" display, which will show a large amount of information - the number of dirty files, unpushed/unpulled commits, and more. In large repositories, this can take a lot of time, so you may wish to disable it in these repositories with git config --local bash.showInformativeStatus false. It also changes the characters the prompt uses to less plain ones ( instead of * for the dirty state for example) , and if you are only interested in that, set $__fish_git_prompt_use_informative_chars instead.

    Because counting untracked files requires a lot of time, the number of untracked files is only shown if enabled via $__fish_git_prompt_showuntrackedfiles or the git option bash.showUntrackedFiles.

  • $__fish_git_prompt_showdirtystate or the git option bash.showDirtyState can be set to 1, true or yes to show if the repository is "dirty", i.e. has uncommitted changes.
  • $__fish_git_prompt_showuntrackedfiles or the git option bash.showUntrackedFiles can be set to 1, true or yes to show if the repository has untracked files (that aren't ignored).
  • $__fish_git_prompt_showupstream can be set to a list of values to determine how changes between HEAD and upstream are shown:
summarize the difference between HEAD and its upstream
show number of commits ahead/behind (+/-) upstream
if verbose, then also show the upstream abbrev name
similar to verbose, but shows nothing when equal - this is the default if informative status is enabled.
always compare HEAD to @{upstream}
always compare HEAD to your SVN upstream
disables (useful with informative status)



  • $__fish_git_prompt_showstashstate can be set to 1, true or yes to display the state of the stash.
  • $__fish_git_prompt_shorten_branch_len can be set to the number of characters that the branch name will be shortened to.
  • $__fish_git_prompt_describe_style can be set to one of the following styles to describe the current HEAD:
relative to newer annotated tag, such as (v1.6.3.2~35)
relative to newer tag or branch, such as (master~4)
relative to older annotated tag, such as (v1.6.3.1-13-gdd42c2f)
an exactly matching tag ((develop))

If none of these apply, the commit SHA shortened to 8 characters is used.



$__fish_git_prompt_showcolorhints can be set to 1, true or yes to enable coloring for the branch name and status symbols.

A number of variables set characters and color used as indicators. Many of these have a different default if used with informative status enabled, or $__fish_git_prompt_use_informative_chars set. The usual default is given first, then the informative default (if it is different). If no default for the colors is given, they default to $__fish_git_prompt_color.

  • $__fish_git_prompt_char_stateseparator (' ', |) - the character to be used between the state characters
  • $__fish_git_prompt_color (no default)
  • $__fish_git_prompt_color_prefix - the color of the ( prefix
  • $__fish_git_prompt_color_suffix - the color of the ) suffix
  • $__fish_git_prompt_color_bare - the color to use for a bare repository - one without a working tree
  • $__fish_git_prompt_color_merging - the color when a merge/rebase/revert/bisect or cherry-pick is in progress
  • $__fish_git_prompt_char_cleanstate (✔ in informative mode) - the character to be used when nothing else applies
  • $__fish_git_prompt_color_cleanstate (no default)

Variables used with showdirtystate:

  • $__fish_git_prompt_char_dirtystate (*, ✚) - the number of "dirty" changes, i.e. unstaged files with changes
  • $__fish_git_prompt_char_invalidstate (#, ✖) - the number of "unmerged" changes, e.g. additional changes to already added files
  • $__fish_git_prompt_char_stagedstate (+, ●) - the number of staged files without additional changes
  • $__fish_git_prompt_color_dirtystate (red with showcolorhints, same as color_flags otherwise)
  • $__fish_git_prompt_color_invalidstate
  • $__fish_git_prompt_color_stagedstate (green with showcolorhints, color_flags otherwise)

Variables used with showstashstate:

  • $__fish_git_prompt_char_stashstate ($, ⚑)
  • $__fish_git_prompt_color_stashstate (same as color_flags)

Variables used with showuntrackedfiles:

  • $__fish_git_prompt_char_untrackedfiles (%, …) - the symbol for untracked files
  • $__fish_git_prompt_color_untrackedfiles (same as color_flags)

Variables used with showupstream (also implied by informative status):

  • $__fish_git_prompt_char_upstream_ahead (>, ↑) - the character for the commits this repository is ahead of upstream
  • $__fish_git_prompt_char_upstream_behind (<, ↓) - the character for the commits this repository is behind upstream
  • $__fish_git_prompt_char_upstream_diverged (<>) - the symbol if this repository is both ahead and behind upstream
  • $__fish_git_prompt_char_upstream_equal (=) - the symbol if this repo is equal to upstream
  • $__fish_git_prompt_char_upstream_prefix ('')
  • $__fish_git_prompt_color_upstream

Colors used with showcolorhints:

  • $__fish_git_prompt_color_branch (green) - the color of the branch if nothing else applies
  • $__fish_git_prompt_color_branch_detached (red) the color of the branch if it's detached (e.g. a commit is checked out)
  • $__fish_git_prompt_color_branch_dirty (no default) the color of the branch if it's dirty and not detached
  • $__fish_git_prompt_color_branch_staged (no default) the color of the branch if it just has something staged and is otherwise clean
  • $__fish_git_prompt_color_flags (--bold blue) - the default color for dirty/staged/stashed/untracked state

Note that all colors can also have a corresponding _done color. For example, the contents of $__fish_git_prompt_color_upstream_done is printed right _after_ the upstream.

See also fish_vcs_prompt, which will call all supported version control prompt functions, including git, Mercurial and Subversion.

Example

A simple prompt that displays git info:

function fish_prompt

# ...
set -g __fish_git_prompt_showupstream auto
printf '%s %s$' $PWD (fish_git_prompt) end


fish_greeting - display a welcome message in interactive shells

Synopsis

fish_greeting

function fish_greeting

... end


Description

When an interactive fish starts, it executes fish_greeting and displays its output.

The default fish_greeting is a function that prints a variable of the same name ($fish_greeting), so you can also just change that if you just want to change the text.

While you could also just put echo calls into config.fish, fish_greeting takes care of only being used in interactive shells, so it won't be used e.g. with scp (which executes a shell), which prevents some errors.

Example

To just empty the text, with the default greeting function:

set -U fish_greeting


or set -g fish_greeting in config.fish.

A simple greeting:

function fish_greeting

echo Hello friend!
echo The time is (set_color yellow)(date +%T)(set_color normal) and this machine is called $hostname end


fish_hg_prompt - output Mercurial information for use in a prompt

Synopsis

fish_hg_prompt

function fish_prompt

printf '%s' $PWD (fish_hg_prompt) ' $ ' end


Description

The fish_hg_prompt function displays information about the current Mercurial repository, if any.

Mercurial <https://www.mercurial-scm.org/> (hg) must be installed.

By default, only the current branch is shown because hg status can be slow on a large repository. You can enable a more informative prompt by setting the variable $fish_prompt_hg_show_informative_status, for example:

set --universal fish_prompt_hg_show_informative_status


If you enabled the informative status, there are numerous customization options, which can be controlled with fish variables.

$fish_color_hg_clean, $fish_color_hg_modified and $fish_color_hg_dirty are colors used when the repository has the respective status.

Some colors for status symbols:

  • $fish_color_hg_added
  • $fish_color_hg_renamed
  • $fish_color_hg_copied
  • $fish_color_hg_deleted
  • $fish_color_hg_untracked
  • $fish_color_hg_unmerged

The status symbols themselves:

  • $fish_prompt_hg_status_added, default '✚'
  • $fish_prompt_hg_status_modified, default '*'
  • $fish_prompt_hg_status_copied, default '⇒'
  • $fish_prompt_hg_status_deleted, default '✖'
  • $fish_prompt_hg_status_untracked, default '?'
  • $fish_prompt_hg_status_unmerged, default '!'

Finally, $fish_prompt_hg_status_order, which can be used to change the order the status symbols appear in. It defaults to added modified copied deleted untracked unmerged.

See also fish_vcs_prompt, which will call all supported version control prompt functions, including git, Mercurial and Subversion.

Example

A simple prompt that displays hg info:

function fish_prompt

...
set -g fish_prompt_hg_show_informative_status
printf '%s %s$' $PWD (fish_hg_prompt) end


fish_indent - indenter and prettifier

Synopsis

fish_indent [OPTIONS] [FILE ...]

Description

fish_indent is used to indent a piece of fish code. fish_indent reads commands from standard input or the given filenames and outputs them to standard output or a specified file (if -w is given).

The following options are available:

Indents a specified file and immediately writes to that file.
Do not indent commands; only reformat to one job per line.
Do not reformat, only indent each line.
Do not reformat, only unindent each line.
Do not indent, only return 0 if the code is already indented as fish_indent would, the number of failed files otherwise. Also print the failed filenames if not reading from standard input.
Displays the current fish version and then exits.
Colorizes the output using ANSI escape sequences, appropriate for the current TERM, using the colors defined in the environment (such as fish_color_command).
Outputs HTML, which supports syntax highlighting if the appropriate CSS is defined. The CSS class names are the same as the variable names, such as fish_color_command.
Enable debug output and specify a pattern for matching debug categories. See Debugging in fish (1) for details.
Specify a file path to receive the debug output, including categories and fish_trace. The default is standard error.
Dumps information about the parsed statements to standard error. This is likely to be of interest only to people working on the fish source code.
Displays help about using this command.

fish_is_root_user - check if the current user is root

Synopsis

fish_is_root_user

Description

fish_is_root_user will check if the current user is root. It can be useful for the prompt to display something different if the user is root, for example.

Example

A simple example:

function example --description 'Just an example'

if fish_is_root_user
do_something_different
end end


fish_key_reader - explore what characters keyboard keys send

Synopsis

fish_key_reader [OPTIONS]

Description

fish_key_reader is used to explain how you would bind a certain key sequence. By default, it prints the bind command for one key sequence read interactively over standard input.

The following options are available:

Begins a session where multiple key sequences can be inspected. By default the program exits after capturing a single key sequence.
Displays help about using this command.
Explain what sequence was received in addition to the decoded key.
Displays the current fish version and then exits.

Usage Notes

fish_key_reader intentionally disables handling of many signals. To terminate fish_key_reader in --continuous mode do:

  • press ctrl-c twice, or
  • press ctrl-d twice, or
  • type exit, or
  • type quit

Example

> fish_key_reader
Press a key:
# press up-arrow
bind up 'do something'


fish_mode_prompt - define the appearance of the mode indicator

Synopsis

fish_mode_prompt

function fish_mode_prompt

echo -n "$fish_bind_mode " end


Description

The fish_mode_prompt function outputs the mode indicator for use in vi mode.

The default fish_mode_prompt function will output indicators about the current vi editor mode displayed to the left of the regular prompt. Define your own function to customize the appearance of the mode indicator. The $fish_bind_mode variable can be used to determine the current mode. It will be one of default, insert, replace_one, or visual.

You can also define an empty fish_mode_prompt function to remove the vi mode indicators:

function fish_mode_prompt; end
funcsave fish_mode_prompt


fish_mode_prompt will be executed when the vi mode changes. If it produces any output, it is displayed and used. If it does not, the other prompt functions (fish_prompt and fish_right_prompt) will be executed as well in case they contain a mode display.

Example

function fish_mode_prompt

switch $fish_bind_mode
case default
set_color --bold red
echo 'N'
case insert
set_color --bold green
echo 'I'
case replace_one
set_color --bold green
echo 'R'
case visual
set_color --bold brmagenta
echo 'V'
case '*'
set_color --bold red
echo '?'
end
set_color normal end


Outputting multiple lines is not supported in fish_mode_prompt.

fish_opt - create an option specification for the argparse command

Synopsis

fish_opt [(-slor | --multiple-vals=) OPTNAME]
fish_opt --help

Description

This command provides a way to produce option specifications suitable for use with the argparse command. You can, of course, write the option specifications by hand without using this command. But you might prefer to use this for the clarity it provides.

The following argparse options are available:

Takes a single letter that is used as the short flag in the option being defined. This option is mandatory.
Takes a string that is used as the long flag in the option being defined. This option is optional and has no default. If no long flag is defined then only the short flag will be allowed when parsing arguments using the option specification.
The option being defined will only allow the long flag name to be used. The short flag name must still be defined (i.e., --short must be specified) but it cannot be used when parsing arguments using this option specification.
The option being defined can take a value, but it is optional rather than required. If the option is seen more than once when parsing arguments, only the last value seen is saved. This means the resulting flag variable created by argparse will zero elements if no value was given with the option else it will have exactly one element.
The option being defined requires a value. If the option is seen more than once when parsing arguments, only the last value seen is saved. This means the resulting flag variable created by argparse will have exactly one element.
The option being defined requires a value each time it is seen. Each instance is stored. This means the resulting flag variable created by argparse will have one element for each instance of this option in the arguments.
Displays help about using this command.

Examples

Define a single option specification for the boolean help flag:

set -l options (fish_opt -s h -l help)
argparse $options -- $argv


Same as above but with a second flag that requires a value:

set -l options (fish_opt -s h -l help)
set options $options (fish_opt -s m -l max --required-val)
argparse $options -- $argv


Same as above but with a third flag that can be given multiple times saving the value of each instance seen and only the long flag name (--token) can be used:

set -l options (fish_opt --short=h --long=help)
set options $options (fish_opt --short=m --long=max --required-val)
set options $options (fish_opt --short=t --long=token --multiple-vals --long-only)
argparse $options -- $argv


fish_prompt - define the appearance of the command line prompt

Synopsis

fish_prompt

function fish_prompt

... end


Description

The fish_prompt function is executed when the prompt is to be shown, and the output is used as a prompt.

The exit status of commands within fish_prompt will not modify the value of $status outside of the fish_prompt function.

fish ships with a number of example prompts that can be chosen with the fish_config command.

Example

A simple prompt:

function fish_prompt -d "Write out the prompt"

# This shows up as USER@HOST /home/user/ >, with the directory colored
# $USER and $hostname are set by fish, so you can just use them
# instead of using `whoami` and `hostname`
printf '%s@%s %s%s%s > ' $USER $hostname \
(set_color $fish_color_cwd) (prompt_pwd) (set_color normal) end


fish_right_prompt - define the appearance of the right-side command line prompt

Synopsis

function fish_right_prompt

... end


Description

fish_right_prompt is similar to fish_prompt, except that it appears on the right side of the terminal window.

Multiple lines are not supported in fish_right_prompt.

Example

A simple right prompt:

function fish_right_prompt -d "Write out the right prompt"

date '+%m/%d/%y' end


fish_should_add_to_history - decide whether a command should be added to the history

Synopsis

fish_should_add_to_history

function fish_should_add_to_history

... end


Description

The fish_should_add_to_history function is executed before fish adds a command to history, and its return status decides whether that is done.

If it returns 0, the command is stored in history, when it returns anything else, it is not. In the latter case the command can still be recalled for one command.

The first argument to fish_should_add_to_history is the commandline. History is added before a command is run, so e.g. status can't be checked. This is so commands that don't finish like exec - execute command in current process and long-running commands are available in new sessions immediately.

If fish_should_add_to_history doesn't exist, fish will save a command to history unless it starts with a space. If it does exist, this function takes over all of the duties, so commands starting with space are saved unless fish_should_add_to_history says otherwise.

Example

A simple example:

function fish_should_add_to_history

for cmd in vault mysql ls
string match -qr "^$cmd" -- $argv; and return 1
end
return 0 end


This refuses to store any immediate "vault", "mysql" or "ls" calls. Commands starting with space would be stored.

function fish_should_add_to_history

# I don't want `git pull`s in my history when I'm in a specific repository
if string match -qr '^git pull'
and string match -qr "^/home/me/my-secret-project/" -- (pwd -P)
return 1
end
return 0 end


fish_status_to_signal - convert exit codes to human-friendly signals

Synopsis

fish_status_to_signal NUM

function fish_prompt

echo -n (fish_status_to_signal $pipestatus | string join '|') (prompt_pwd) '$ ' end


Description

fish_status_to_signal converts exit codes to their corresponding human-friendly signals if one exists. This is likely to be useful for prompts in conjunction with the $status and $pipestatus variables.

Example

>_ sleep 5
^C⏎
>_ fish_status_to_signal $status
SIGINT


fish_svn_prompt - output Subversion information for use in a prompt

Synopsis

fish_svn_prompt

function fish_prompt

printf '%s' $PWD (fish_svn_prompt) ' $ ' end


Description

The fish_svn_prompt function displays information about the current Subversion repository, if any.

Subversion <https://subversion.apache.org/> (svn) must be installed.

There are numerous customization options, which can be controlled with fish variables.

__fish_svn_prompt_color_revision
the colour of the revision number to display in the prompt

__fish_svn_prompt_char_separator
the separator between status characters


A number of variables control the symbol ("display") and color ("color") for the different status indicators:

  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_added_display
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_added_color
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_conflicted_display
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_conflicted_color
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_deleted_display
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_deleted_color
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_ignored_display
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_ignored_color
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_modified_display
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_modified_color
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_replaced_display
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_replaced_color
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_unversioned_external_display
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_unversioned_external_color
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_unversioned_display
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_unversioned_color
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_missing_display
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_missing_color
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_versioned_obstructed_display
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_versioned_obstructed_color
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_locked_display
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_locked_color
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_scheduled_display
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_scheduled_color
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_switched_display
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_switched_color
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_token_present_display
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_token_present_color
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_token_other_display
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_token_other_color
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_token_stolen_display
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_token_stolen_color
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_token_broken_display
  • __fish_svn_prompt_char_token_broken_color

See also fish_vcs_prompt, which will call all supported version control prompt functions, including git, Mercurial and Subversion.

Example

A simple prompt that displays svn info:

function fish_prompt

...
printf '%s %s$' $PWD (fish_svn_prompt) end


fish_title - define the terminal's title

Synopsis

fish_title

function fish_title

... end


Description

The fish_title function is executed before and after a new command is executed or put into the foreground and the output is used as a titlebar message.

The first argument to fish_title contains the most recently executed foreground command as a string, if any.

This requires that your terminal supports programmable titles and the feature is turned on.

Example

A simple title:

function fish_title

set -q argv[1]; or set argv fish
# Looks like ~/d/fish: git log
# or /e/apt: fish
echo (fish_prompt_pwd_dir_length=1 prompt_pwd): $argv; end


fish_update_completions - update completions using manual pages

Synopsis

fish_update_completions

Description

fish_update_completions parses manual pages installed on the system, and attempts to create completion files in the fish configuration directory.

This does not overwrite custom completions.

There are no parameters for fish_update_completions.

fish_vcs_prompt - output version control system information for use in a prompt

Synopsis

fish_vcs_prompt

function fish_prompt

printf '%s' $PWD (fish_vcs_prompt) ' $ ' end


Description

The fish_vcs_prompt function displays information about the current version control system (VCS) repository, if any.

It calls out to VCS-specific functions. The currently supported systems are:

  • fish_git_prompt
  • fish_hg_prompt
  • fish_svn_prompt

If a VCS isn't installed, the respective function does nothing.

The Subversion prompt is disabled by default, because it's slow on large repositories. To enable it, modify fish_vcs_prompt to uncomment it. See funced.

For more information, see the documentation for each of the functions above.

Example

A simple prompt that displays all known VCS info:

function fish_prompt

...
set -g __fish_git_prompt_showupstream auto
printf '%s %s$' $PWD (fish_vcs_prompt) end


fish_vi_key_bindings - set vi key bindings for fish

Synopsis

fish_vi_key_bindings
fish_vi_key_bindings [--no-erase] [INIT_MODE]

Description

fish_vi_key_bindings sets the vi key bindings for fish shell.

If a valid INIT_MODE is provided (insert, default, visual), then that mode will become the default . If no INIT_MODE is given, the mode defaults to insert mode.

The following parameters are available:

Does not clear previous set bindings

Further information on how to use vi mode.

Examples

To start using vi key bindings:

fish_vi_key_bindings


or set -g fish_key_bindings fish_vi_key_bindings in config.fish.

for - perform a set of commands multiple times

Synopsis

for VARNAME in [VALUES ...]; COMMANDS ...; end

Description

for is a loop construct. It will perform the commands specified by COMMANDS multiple times. On each iteration, the local variable specified by VARNAME is assigned a new value from VALUES. If VALUES is empty, COMMANDS will not be executed at all. The VARNAME is visible when the loop terminates and will contain the last value assigned to it. If VARNAME does not already exist it will be set in the local scope. For our purposes if the for block is inside a function there must be a local variable with the same name. If the for block is not nested inside a function then global and universal variables of the same name will be used if they exist.

Much like set, for does not modify $status, but the evaluation of its subordinate commands can.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Example

for i in foo bar baz; echo $i; end
# would output:
foo
bar
baz


Notes

The VARNAME was local to the for block in releases prior to 3.0.0. This means that if you did something like this:

for var in a b c

if break_from_loop
break
end end echo $var


The last value assigned to var when the loop terminated would not be available outside the loop. What echo $var would write depended on what it was set to before the loop was run. Likely nothing.

funced - edit a function interactively

Synopsis

funced [OPTIONS] NAME

Description

funced provides an interface to edit the definition of the function NAME.

If the $VISUAL environment variable is set, it will be used as the program to edit the function. If $VISUAL is unset but $EDITOR is set, that will be used. Otherwise, a built-in editor will be used. Note that to enter a literal newline using the built-in editor you should press alt-enter. Pressing enter signals that you are done editing the function. This does not apply to an external editor like emacs or vim.

funced will try to edit the original file that a function is defined in, which might include variable definitions or helper functions as well. If changes cannot be saved to the original file, a copy will be created in the user's function directory.

If there is no function called NAME, a new function will be created with the specified name.

Open the function body inside the text editor given by the command (for example, -e vi). The special command fish will use the built-in editor (same as specifying -i).
Force opening the function body in the built-in editor even if $VISUAL or $EDITOR is defined.
Automatically save the function after successfully editing it.
Displays help about using this command.

Example

Say you want to modify your prompt.

Run:

>_ funced fish_prompt


This will open up your editor, allowing you to modify the function. When you're done, save and quit. Fish will reload the function, so you should see the changes right away.

When you're done, use:

>_ funcsave fish_prompt


For more, see funcsave. To view a function's current definition, use functions or type.

funcsave - save the definition of a function to the user's autoload directory

Synopsis

funcsave FUNCTION_NAME
funcsave [-q | --quiet] [(-d | --directory) DIR] FUNCTION_NAME

Description

funcsave saves a function to a file in the fish configuration directory. This function will be automatically loaded by current and future fish sessions. This can be useful to commit functions created interactively for permanent use.

If you have erased a function using functions's --erase option, funcsave will remove the saved function definition.

Because fish loads functions on-demand, saved functions cannot serve as event handlers until they are run or otherwise sourced. To activate an event handler for every new shell, add the function to the configuration file instead of using funcsave.

This is often used after funced, which opens the function in $EDITOR or $VISUAL and loads it into the current session afterwards.

To view a function's current definition, use functions or type.

function - create a function

Synopsis

function NAME [OPTIONS]; BODY; end

Description

function creates a new function NAME with the body BODY.

A function is a list of commands that will be executed when the name of the function is given as a command.

The following options are available:

Has to be the last option. Assigns the value of successive command-line arguments to the names given in NAMES (separated by space). These are the same arguments given in argv, and are still available there. See also Argument Handling.
A description of what the function does, suitable as a completion description.
Inherit completions from the given WRAPPED_COMMAND. See the documentation for complete for more information.
Run this function when the specified named event is emitted. Fish internally generates named events, for example, when showing the prompt. Custom events can be emitted using the emit command.
Run this function when the variable VARIABLE_NAME changes value. Note that fish makes no guarantees on any particular timing or even that the function will be run for every single set. Rather it will be run when the variable has been set at least once, possibly skipping some values or being run when the variable has been set to the same value (except for universal variables set in other shells - only changes in the value will be picked up for those).
Run this function when the job containing a child process with the given process identifier PID exits. Instead of a PID, the string 'caller' can be specified. This is only allowed when in a command substitution, and will result in the handler being triggered by the exit of the job which created this command substitution. This will not trigger for disowned jobs.
Run this function when the fish child process with process ID PID exits. Instead of a PID, for backward compatibility, "%self" can be specified as an alias for $fish_pid, and the function will be run when the current fish instance exits. This will not trigger for disowned jobs.
Run this function when the signal SIGSPEC is delivered. SIGSPEC can be a signal number, or the signal name, such as SIGHUP (or just HUP). Note that the signal must have been delivered to fish; for example, ctrl-c sends SIGINT to the foreground process group, which will not be fish if you are running another command at the time. Observing a signal will prevent fish from exiting in response to that signal.
Allows the function to access the variables of calling functions. Normally, any variables inside the function that have the same name as variables from the calling function are "shadowed", and their contents are independent of the calling function.

It's important to note that this does not capture referenced variables or the scope at the time of function declaration! At this time, fish does not have any concept of closures, and variable lifetimes are never extended. In other words, by using --no-scope-shadowing the scope of the function each time it is run is shared with the scope it was called from rather than the scope it was defined in.

Snapshots the value of the variable NAME and defines a local variable with that same name and value when the function is defined. This is similar to a closure in other languages like Python but a bit different. Note the word "snapshot" in the first sentence. If you change the value of the variable after defining the function, even if you do so in the same scope (typically another function) the new value will not be used by the function you just created using this option. See the function notify example below for how this might be used.

The event handler switches (on-event, on-variable, on-job-exit, on-process-exit and on-signal) cause a function to run automatically at specific events. New named events for --on-event can be fired using the emit builtin. Fish already generates a few events, see Event handlers for more.

Functions names cannot be reserved words. These are elements of fish syntax or builtin commands which are essential for the operations of the shell. Current reserved words are [, _, and, argparse, begin, break, builtin, case, command, continue, else, end, eval, exec, for, function, if, not, or, read, return, set, status, string, switch, test, time, and while.

Example

function ll

ls -l $argv end


will run the ls command, using the -l option, while passing on any additional files and switches to ls.

function debug -a name val

echo [DEBUG] $name: $val >&2 end set foo bar debug foo bar # prints: [DEBUG] foo: bar # OR function debug2 -a var
echo [DEBUG] $var: $$var >&2 end set foo bar debug2 foo # prints: [DEBUG] foo: bar


will create a debug command to print chosen variables to stderr.

function mkdir -d "Create a directory and set CWD"

command mkdir $argv
if test $status = 0
switch $argv[(count $argv)]
case '-*'
case '*'
cd $argv[(count $argv)]
return
end
end end


This will run the mkdir command, and if it is successful, change the current working directory to the one just created.

function notify

set -l job (jobs -l -g)
or begin; echo "There are no jobs" >&2; return 1; end
function _notify_job_$job --on-job-exit $job --inherit-variable job
echo -n \a # beep
functions -e _notify_job_$job
end end


This will beep when the most recent job completes.

Notes

Events are only received from the current fish process as there is no way to send events from one fish process to another.

See more

For more explanation of how functions fit into fish, see Functions.

functions - print or erase functions

Synopsis

functions [-a | --all] [-n | --names]
functions [-D | --details] [-v] FUNCTION
functions -c OLDNAME NEWNAME
functions -d DESCRIPTION FUNCTION
functions [-e | -q] FUNCTION ...

Description

functions prints or erases functions.

The following options are available:

Lists all functions, even those whose name starts with an underscore.
Creates a new function named NEWNAME, using the definition of the OLDNAME function.
Changes the description of this function.
Causes the specified functions to be erased. This also means that it is prevented from autoloading in the current session. Use funcsave to remove the saved copy.
Reports the path name where the specified function is defined or could be autoloaded, stdin if the function was defined interactively or on the command line or by reading standard input, - if the function was created via source, and n/a if the function isn't available. (Functions created via alias will return -, because alias uses source internally. Copied functions will return where the function was copied.) If the --verbose option is also specified then five lines are written:
  • the path name as already described,
  • if the function was copied, the path name to where the function was originally defined, otherwise autoloaded, not-autoloaded or n/a,
  • the line number within the file or zero if not applicable,
  • scope-shadowing if the function shadows the vars in the calling function (the normal case if it wasn't defined with --no-scope-shadowing), else no-scope-shadowing, or n/a if the function isn't defined,
  • the function description minimally escaped so it is a single line, or n/a if the function isn't defined or has no description.

You should not assume that only five lines will be written since we may add additional information to the output in the future.

Turns off function path reporting, so just the definition will be printed.
Lists the names of all defined functions.
Tests if the specified functions exist.
Make some output more verbose.
Show all event handlers.
Show all event handlers matching the given TYPE.
Displays help about using this command.

The default behavior of functions, when called with no arguments, is to print the names of all defined functions. Unless the -a option is given, no functions starting with underscores are included in the output.

If any non-option parameters are given, the definition of the specified functions are printed.

Copying a function using -c copies only the body of the function, and does not attach any event notifications from the original function.

Only one function's description can be changed in a single invocation of functions -d.

The exit status of functions is the number of functions specified in the argument list that do not exist, which can be used in concert with the -q option.

Examples

functions -n
# Displays a list of currently-defined functions
functions -c foo bar
# Copies the 'foo' function to a new function called 'bar'
functions -e bar
# Erases the function ``bar``


See more

For more explanation of how functions fit into fish, see Functions.

help - display fish documentation

Synopsis

help [SECTION]

Description

help displays the fish help documentation.

If a SECTION is specified, the help for that command is shown.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

If the BROWSER environment variable is set, it will be used to display the documentation. Otherwise, fish will search for a suitable browser. To use a different browser than as described above, you can set $fish_help_browser This variable may be set as a list, where the first element is the browser command and the rest are browser options.

Example

help fg shows the documentation for the fg builtin.

Notes

Most builtin commands, including this one, display their help in the terminal when given the --help option.

history - show and manipulate command history

Synopsis

history [search] [--show-time] [--case-sensitive]

[--exact | --prefix | --contains] [--max N] [--null] [--reverse]
[SEARCH_STRING ...] history delete [--case-sensitive]
[--exact | --prefix | --contains] SEARCH_STRING ... history merge history save history clear history clear-session history append COMMAND ...

Description

history is used to search, delete, and otherwise manipulate the history of interactive commands.

The following operations (sub-commands) are available:

Returns history items matching the search string. If no search string is provided it returns all history items. This is the default operation if no other operation is specified. You only have to explicitly say history search if you wish to search for one of the subcommands. The --contains search option will be used if you don't specify a different search option. Entries are ordered newest to oldest unless you use the --reverse flag. If stdout is attached to a tty the output will be piped through your pager by the history function. The history builtin simply writes the results to stdout.
Deletes history items. The --contains search option will be used if you don't specify a different search option. If you don't specify --exact a prompt will be displayed before any items are deleted asking you which entries are to be deleted. You can enter the word "all" to delete all matching entries. You can enter a single ID (the number in square brackets) to delete just that single entry. You can enter more than one ID, or an ID range separated by a space to delete multiple entries. Just press [enter] to not delete anything. Note that the interactive delete behavior is a feature of the history function. The history builtin only supports --exact --case-sensitive deletion.
Immediately incorporates history changes from other sessions. Ordinarily fish ignores history changes from sessions started after the current one. This command applies those changes immediately.
Immediately writes all changes to the history file. The shell automatically saves the history file; this option is provided for internal use and should not normally need to be used by the user.
Clears the history file. A prompt is displayed before the history is erased asking you to confirm you really want to clear all history unless builtin history is used.
Clears the history file from all activity of the current session. Note: If history merge or builtin history merge is run in a session, only the history after this will be erased.
Appends commands to the history without needing to execute them.

The following options are available:

These flags can appear before or immediately after one of the sub-commands listed above.

Does a case-sensitive search. The default is case-insensitive. Note that prior to fish 2.4.0 the default was case-sensitive.
Searches items in the history that contain the specified text string. This is the default for the --search flag. This is not currently supported by the delete subcommand.
Searches or deletes items in the history that exactly match the specified text string. This is the default for the delete subcommand. Note that the match is case-insensitive by default. If you really want an exact match, including letter case, you must use the -C or --case-sensitive flag.
Searches items in the history that begin with the specified text string. This is not currently supported by the delete subcommand.
Prepends each history entry with the date and time the entry was recorded. By default it uses the strftime format # %c%n. You can specify another format; e.g., --show-time="%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S " or --show-time="%a%I%p". The short option, -t, doesn't accept a strftime format string; it only uses the default format. Any strftime format is allowed, including %s to get the raw UNIX seconds since the epoch.
Causes history entries written by the search operations to be terminated by a NUL character rather than a newline. This allows the output to be processed by read -z to correctly handle multiline history entries.
-*NUMBER* -n NUMBER or --max NUMBER
Limits the matched history items to the first NUMBER matching entries. This is only valid for history search.
Causes the history search results to be ordered oldest to newest. Which is the order used by most shells. The default is newest to oldest.
Displays help for this command.

Example

history clear
# Deletes all history items
history search --contains "foo"
# Outputs a list of all previous commands containing the string "foo".
history delete --prefix "foo"
# Interactively deletes commands which start with "foo" from the history.
# You can select more than one entry by entering their IDs separated by a space.


Customizing the name of the history file

By default interactive commands are logged to $XDG_DATA_HOME/fish/fish_history (typically ~/.local/share/fish/fish_history).

You can set the fish_history variable to another name for the current shell session. The default value (when the variable is unset) is fish which corresponds to $XDG_DATA_HOME/fish/fish_history. If you set it to e.g. fun, the history would be written to $XDG_DATA_HOME/fish/fun_history. An empty string means history will not be stored at all. This is similar to the private session features in web browsers.

You can change fish_history at any time (by using set -x fish_history "session_name") and it will take effect right away. If you set it to "default", it will use the default session name (which is "fish").

Other shells such as bash and zsh use a variable named HISTFILE for a similar purpose. Fish uses a different name to avoid conflicts and signal that the behavior is different (session name instead of a file path). Also, if you set the var to anything other than fish or default it will inhibit importing the bash history. That's because the most common use case for this feature is to avoid leaking private or sensitive history when giving a presentation.

Notes

If you specify both --prefix and --contains the last flag seen is used.

Note that for backwards compatibility each subcommand can also be specified as a long option. For example, rather than history search you can type history --search. Those long options are deprecated and will be removed in a future release.

if - conditionally execute a command

Synopsis

if CONDITION; COMMANDS_TRUE ...;
[else if CONDITION2; COMMANDS_TRUE2 ...;]
[else; COMMANDS_FALSE ...;]
end

Description

if will execute the command CONDITION. If the condition's exit status is 0, the commands COMMANDS_TRUE will execute. If the exit status is not 0 and else is given, COMMANDS_FALSE will be executed.

You can use and or or in the condition. See the second example below.

The exit status of the last foreground command to exit can always be accessed using the $status variable.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Example

The following code will print foo.txt exists if the file foo.txt exists and is a regular file, otherwise it will print bar.txt exists if the file bar.txt exists and is a regular file, otherwise it will print foo.txt and bar.txt do not exist.

if test -f foo.txt

echo foo.txt exists else if test -f bar.txt
echo bar.txt exists else
echo foo.txt and bar.txt do not exist end


The following code will print "foo.txt exists and is readable" if foo.txt is a regular file and readable

if test -f foo.txt

and test -r foo.txt
echo "foo.txt exists and is readable" end


See also

if is only as useful as the command used as the condition.

Fish ships a few:

  • test - perform tests on files and text can compare numbers, strings and check paths
  • string - manipulate strings can perform string operations including wildcard and regular expression matches
  • path - manipulate and check paths can check paths for permissions, existence or type
  • contains - test if a word is present in a list can check if an element is in a list

isatty - test if a file descriptor is a terminal

Synopsis

isatty [FILE_DESCRIPTOR]

Description

isatty tests if a file descriptor is a terminal (as opposed to a file). The name is derived from the system call of the same name, which for historical reasons refers to a teletypewriter (TTY).

FILE DESCRIPTOR may be either the number of a file descriptor, or one of the strings stdin, stdout, or stderr. If not specified, zero is assumed.

If the specified file descriptor is a terminal device, the exit status of the command is zero. Otherwise, the exit status is non-zero. No messages are printed to standard error.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Examples

From an interactive shell, the commands below exit with a return value of zero:

isatty
isatty stdout
isatty 2
echo | isatty 1


And these will exit non-zero:

echo | isatty
isatty 9
isatty stdout > file
isatty 2 2> file


jobs - print currently running jobs

Synopsis

jobs [OPTIONS] [PID | %JOBID]

Description

NOTE: This page documents the fish builtin jobs. To see the documentation on any non-fish versions, use command man jobs.

jobs prints a list of the currently running jobs and their status.

jobs accepts the following options:

Prints the command name for each process in jobs.
Only prints the group ID of each job.
Prints only the last job to be started.
Prints the process ID for each process in all jobs.
Prints no output for evaluation of jobs by exit status only. For compatibility with old fish versions this is also --quiet (but this is deprecated).
Displays help about using this command.

On systems that support this feature, jobs will print the CPU usage of each job since the last command was executed. The CPU usage is expressed as a percentage of full CPU activity. Note that on multiprocessor systems, the total activity may be more than 100%.

Arguments of the form PID or %JOBID restrict the output to jobs with the selected process identifiers or job numbers respectively.

If the output of jobs is redirected or if it is part of a command substitution, the column header that is usually printed is omitted, making it easier to parse.

The exit status of jobs is 0 if there are running background jobs and 1 otherwise.

Example

jobs outputs a summary of the current jobs, such as two long-running tasks in this example:

Job Group   State   Command
2   26012   running nc -l 55232 < /dev/random &
1   26011   running python tests/test_11.py &


math - perform mathematics calculations

Synopsis

math [(-s | --scale) N] [(-b | --base) BASE] [(-m | --scale-mode) MODE] EXPRESSION ...

Description

math performs mathematical calculations. It supports simple operations such as addition, subtraction, and so on, as well as functions like abs(), sqrt() and ln().

By default, the output shows up to 6 decimal places. To change the number of decimal places, use the --scale option, including --scale=0 for integer output.

Keep in mind that parameter expansion happens before expressions are evaluated. This can be very useful in order to perform calculations involving shell variables or the output of command substitutions, but it also means that parenthesis (()) and the asterisk (*) glob character have to be escaped or quoted. x can also be used to denote multiplication, but it needs to be followed by whitespace to distinguish it from hexadecimal numbers.

Parentheses for functions are optional - math sin pi prints 0. However, a comma will bind to the inner function, so math pow sin 3, 5 is an error because it tries to give sin the arguments 3 and 5. When in doubt, use parentheses.

math ignores whitespace between arguments and takes its input as multiple arguments (internally joined with a space), so math 2 +2 and math "2 + 2" work the same. math 2 2 is an error.

The following options are available:

Sets the scale of the result. N must be an integer or the word "max" for the maximum scale. A scale of zero causes results to be truncated by default. Any non-integer component is thrown away. So 3/2 returns 1 by default, rather than 2 which 1.5 would normally round to. This is for compatibility with bc which was the basis for this command prior to fish 3.0.0. Scale values greater than zero causes the result to be rounded using the usual rules to the specified number of decimal places.
Sets the numeric base used for output (math always understands hexadecimal numbers as input). It currently understands "hex" or "16" for hexadecimal and "octal" or "8" for octal and implies a scale of 0 (other scales cause an error), so it will truncate the result down to an integer. This might change in the future. Hex numbers will be printed with a 0x prefix. Octal numbers will have a prefix of 0 but aren't understood by math as input.
Sets scale behavior. The MODE can be truncate, round, floor, ceiling. The default value of scale mode is round with non zero scale and truncate with zero scale.
Displays help about using this command.

Return Values

If the expression is successfully evaluated and doesn't over/underflow or return NaN the return status is zero (success) else one.

Syntax

math knows some operators, constants, functions and can (obviously) read numbers.

For numbers, . is always the radix character regardless of locale - 2.5, not 2,5. Scientific notation (10e5) and hexadecimal (0xFF) are also available.

math allows you to use underscores as visual separators for digit grouping. For example, you can write 1_000_000, 0x_89_AB_CD_EF, and 1.234_567_e89.

Operators

math knows the following operators:

+
for addition
-
for subtraction
* or x
for multiplication. * is the glob character and needs to be quoted or escaped, x needs to be followed by whitespace or it looks like 0x hexadecimal notation.
/
for division
^
for exponentiation
%
for modulo
( or )
for grouping. These need to be quoted or escaped because () denotes a command substitution.

They are all used in an infix manner - 5 + 2, not + 5 2.

Constants

math knows the following constants:

Euler's number
π, you know this one. Half of Tau
Equivalent to 2π, or the number of radians in a circle

Use them without a leading $ - pi - 3 should be about 0.

Functions

math supports the following functions:

the absolute value, with positive sign
arc cosine
arc sine
arc tangent
arc tangent of two variables
perform bitwise operations. These will throw away any non-integer parts and interpret the rest as an int.

Note: bitnot and bitnand don't exist. This is because numbers in math don't really have a width in terms of bits, and these operations necessarily care about leading zeroes.

If you need to negate a specific number you can do it with an xor with a mask, e.g.:

> math --base=hex bitxor 0x0F, 0xFF
0xF0
> math --base=hex bitxor 0x2, 0x3
# Here we mask with 0x3 == 0b111, so our number is 3 bits wide
# Only the 1 bit isn't set.
0x1


round number up to the nearest integer
the cosine
hyperbolic cosine
the base-e exponential function
factorial - also known as x! (x * (x - 1) * (x - 2) * ... * 1)
round number down to the nearest integer
the base-e logarithm
the base-10 logarithm
the base-2 logarithm
returns the largest of the given numbers - this takes an arbitrary number of arguments (but at least one)
returns the smallest of the given numbers - this takes an arbitrary number of arguments (but at least one)
"from n choose r" combination function - how many subsets of size r can be taken from n (order doesn't matter)
the number of subsets of size r that can be taken from a set of n elements (including different order)
returns x to the y (and can be written as x ^ y)
rounds to the nearest integer, away from 0
the sine function
the hyperbolic sine
the square root - (can also be written as x ^ 0.5)
the tangent
the hyperbolic tangent

All of the trigonometric functions use radians (the pi-based scale, not 360°).

Examples

math 1+1 outputs 2.

math $status - 128 outputs the numerical exit status of the last command minus 128.

math 10 / 6 outputs 1.666667.

math -s0 10.0 / 6.0 outputs 1.

math -s3 10 / 6 outputs 1.667.

math "sin(pi)" outputs 0.

math 5 \* 2 or math "5 * 2" or math 5 "*" 2 all output 10.

math 0xFF outputs 255, math 0 x 3 outputs 0 (because it computes 0 multiplied by 3).

math bitand 0xFE, 0x2e outputs 46.

math "bitor(9,2)" outputs 11.

math --base=hex 192 prints 0xc0.

math 'ncr(49,6)' prints 13983816 - that's the number of possible picks in 6-from-49 lotto.

math max 5,2,3,1 prints 5.

Compatibility notes

Fish 1.x and 2.x releases relied on the bc command for handling math expressions. Starting with fish 3.0.0 fish uses the tinyexpr library and evaluates the expression without the involvement of any external commands.

You don't need to use -- before the expression, even if it begins with a minus sign which might otherwise be interpreted as an invalid option. If you do insert -- before the expression, it will cause option scanning to stop just like for every other command and it won't be part of the expression.

nextd - move forward through directory history

Synopsis

nextd [-l | --list] [POS]

Description

nextd moves forwards POS positions in the history of visited directories; if the end of the history has been hit, a warning is printed.

If the -l or --list option is specified, the current directory history is also displayed.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Note that the cd command limits directory history to the 25 most recently visited directories. The history is stored in the dirprev and dirnext variables which this command manipulates.

Example

cd /usr/src
# Working directory is now /usr/src
cd /usr/src/fish-shell
# Working directory is now /usr/src/fish-shell
prevd
# Working directory is now /usr/src
nextd
# Working directory is now /usr/src/fish-shell


See Also

  • the cdh command to display a prompt to quickly navigate the history
  • the dirh command to print the directory history
  • the prevd command to move backward

not - negate the exit status of a job

Synopsis

not COMMAND [OPTIONS ...]
! COMMAND [OPTIONS ...]

Description

not negates the exit status of another command. If the exit status is zero, not returns 1. Otherwise, not returns 0.

Some other shells only support the ! alias.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Example

The following code reports an error and exits if no file named spoon can be found.

if not test -f spoon

echo There is no spoon
exit 1 end


open - open file in its default application

Synopsis

open FILES ...

Description

open opens a file in its default application, using the appropriate tool for the operating system. On GNU/Linux, this requires the common but optional xdg-open utility, from the xdg-utils package.

Note that this function will not be used if a command by this name exists (which is the case on macOS or Haiku).

Example

open *.txt opens all the text files in the current directory using your system's default text editor.

or - conditionally execute a command

Synopsis

COMMAND1; or COMMAND2

Description

or is used to execute a command if the previous command was not successful (returned a status of something other than 0).

or statements may be used as part of the condition in an if or while block.

or does not change the current exit status itself, but the command it runs most likely will. The exit status of the last foreground command to exit can always be accessed using the $status variable.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Example

The following code runs the make command to build a program. If the build succeeds, the program is installed. If either step fails, make clean is run, which removes the files created by the build process.

make; and make install; or make clean


See Also

and command

path - manipulate and check paths

Synopsis

path basename GENERAL_OPTIONS [(-E | --no-extension)] [PATH ...]
path dirname GENERAL_OPTIONS  [PATH ...]
path extension GENERAL_OPTIONS [PATH ...]
path filter GENERAL_OPTIONS [-v | --invert]

[-d] [-f] [-l] [-r] [-w] [-x]
[(-t | --type) TYPE] [(-p | --perm) PERMISSION] [PATH ...] path is GENERAL_OPTIONS [(-v | --invert)] [(-t | --type) TYPE]
[-d] [-f] [-l] [-r] [-w] [-x]
[(-p | --perm) PERMISSION] [PATH ...] path mtime GENERAL_OPTIONS [(-R | --relative)] [PATH ...] path normalize GENERAL_OPTIONS [PATH ...] path resolve GENERAL_OPTIONS [PATH ...] path change-extension GENERAL_OPTIONS EXTENSION [PATH ...] path sort GENERAL_OPTIONS [-r | --reverse]
[-u | --unique] [--key=basename|dirname|path] [PATH ...] GENERAL_OPTIONS
[-z | --null-in] [-Z | --null-out] [-q | --quiet]

Description

path performs operations on paths.

PATH arguments are taken from the command line unless standard input is connected to a pipe or a file, in which case they are read from standard input, one PATH per line. It is an error to supply PATH arguments on both the command line and on standard input.

Arguments starting with - are normally interpreted as switches; -- causes the following arguments not to be treated as switches even if they begin with -. Switches and required arguments are recognized only on the command line.

When a path starts with -, path filter and path normalize will prepend ./ on output to avoid it being interpreted as an option otherwise, so it's safe to pass path's output to other commands that can handle relative paths.

All subcommands accept a -q or --quiet switch, which suppresses the usual output but exits with the documented status. In this case these commands will quit early, without reading all of the available input.

All subcommands also accept a -Z or --null-out switch, which makes them print output separated with NUL instead of newlines. This is for further processing, e.g. passing to another path, or xargs -0. This is not recommended when the output goes to the terminal or a command substitution.

All subcommands also accept a -z or --null-in switch, which makes them accept arguments from stdin separated with NULL-bytes. Since Unix paths can't contain NULL, that makes it possible to handle all possible paths and read input from e.g. find -print0. If arguments are given on the commandline this has no effect. This should mostly be unnecessary since path automatically starts splitting on NULL if one appears in the first PATH_MAX bytes, PATH_MAX being the operating system's maximum length for a path plus a NULL byte.

Some subcommands operate on the paths as strings and so work on nonexistent paths, while others need to access the paths themselves and so filter out nonexistent paths.

The following subcommands are available.

"basename" subcommand

path basename [-E | --no-extension] [-z | --null-in] [-Z | --null-out] [-q | --quiet] [PATH ...]


path basename returns the last path component of the given path, by removing the directory prefix and removing trailing slashes. In other words, it is the part that is not the dirname. For files you might call it the "filename".

If the -E or ---no-extension option is used and the base name contained a period, the path is returned with the extension (or the last extension) removed, i.e. the "filename" without an extension (akin to calling path change-extension "" (path basename $path)).

It returns 0 if there was a basename, i.e. if the path wasn't empty or just slashes.

Examples

>_ path basename ./foo.mp4
foo.mp4
>_ path basename ../banana
banana
>_ path basename /usr/bin/
bin
>_ path basename /usr/bin/*
# This prints all files in /usr/bin/
# A selection:
cp
fish
grep
rm


"dirname" subcommand

path dirname [-z | --null-in] [-Z | --null-out] [-q | --quiet] [PATH ...]


path dirname returns the dirname for the given path. This is the part before the last "/", discounting trailing slashes. In other words, it is the part that is not the basename (discounting superfluous slashes).

It returns 0 if there was a dirname, i.e. if the path wasn't empty or just slashes.

Examples

>_ path dirname ./foo.mp4
.
>_ path dirname ../banana
..
>_ path dirname /usr/bin/
/usr


"extension" subcommand

path extension [-z | --null-in] [-Z | --null-out] [-q | --quiet] [PATH ...]


path extension returns the extension of the given path. This is the part after (and including) the last ".", unless that "." followed a "/" or the basename is "." or "..", in which case there is no extension and an empty line is printed.

If the filename ends in a ".", only a "." is printed.

It returns 0 if there was an extension.

Examples

>_ path extension ./foo.mp4
.mp4
>_ path extension ../banana
# an empty line, status 1
>_ path extension ~/.config
# an empty line, status 1
>_ path extension ~/.config.d
.d
>_ path extension ~/.config.
.
>_ set -l path (path change-extension '' ./foo.mp4)
>_ set -l extension (path extension ./foo.mp4)
> echo $path$extension
# reconstructs the original path again.
./foo.mp4


"filter" subcommand

path filter [-z | --null-in] [-Z | --null-out] [-q | --quiet] \

[-d] [-f] [-l] [-r] [-w] [-x] \
[-v | --invert] [(-t | --type) TYPE] [(-p | --perm) PERMISSION] [PATH ...]


path filter returns all of the given paths that match the given checks. In all cases, the paths need to exist, nonexistent paths are always filtered.

The available filters are:

  • -t or --type with the options: "dir", "file", "link", "block", "char", "fifo" and "socket", in which case the path needs to be a directory, file, link, block device, character device, named pipe or socket, respectively.
  • -d, -f and -l are short for --type=dir, --type=file and --type=link, respectively. There are no shortcuts for the other types.
  • -p or --perm with the options: "read", "write", and "exec", as well as "suid", "sgid", "user" (referring to the path owner) and "group" (referring to the path's group), in which case the path needs to have all of the given permissions for the current user.
  • -r, -w and -x are short for --perm=read, --perm=write and --perm=exec, respectively. There are no shortcuts for the other permissions.

Note that the path needs to be any of the given types, but have all of the given permissions. This is because having a path that is both writable and executable makes sense, but having a path that is both a directory and a file doesn't. Links will count as the type of the linked-to file, so links to files count as files, links to directories count as directories.

The filter options can either be given as multiple options, or comma-separated - path filter -t dir,file or path filter --type dir --type file are equivalent.

With --invert, the meaning of the filtering is inverted - any path that wouldn't pass (including by not existing) passes, and any path that would pass fails.

When a path starts with -, path filter will prepend ./ to avoid it being interpreted as an option otherwise.

It returns 0 if at least one path passed the filter.

path is is shorthand for path filter -q, i.e. just checking without producing output, see The is subcommand.

Examples

>_ path filter /usr/bin /usr/argagagji
# The (hopefully) nonexistent argagagji is filtered implicitly:
/usr/bin
>_ path filter --type file /usr/bin /usr/bin/fish
# Only fish is a file
/usr/bin/fish
>_ path filter --type file,dir --perm exec,write /usr/bin/fish /home/me
# fish is a file, which passes, and executable, which passes,
# but probably not writable, which fails.
#
# $HOME is a directory and both writable and executable, typically.
# So it passes.
/home/me
>_ path filter -fdxw /usr/bin/fish /home/me
# This is the same as above: "-f" is "--type=file", "-d" is "--type=dir",
# "-x" is short for "--perm=exec" and "-w" short for "--perm=write"!
/home/me
>_ path filter -fx $PATH/*
# Prints all possible commands - the first entry of each name is what fish would execute!


"is" subcommand

path is [-z | --null-in] [-Z | --null-out] [-q | --quiet] \

[-d] [-f] [-l] [-r] [-w] [-x] \
[-v | --invert] [(-t | --type) TYPE] [(-p | --perm) PERMISSION] [PATH ...]


path is is short for path filter -q. It returns true if any of the given files passes the filter, but does not produce any output.

--quiet can still be passed for compatibility but is redundant. The options are the same as for path filter.

Examples

>_ path is /usr/bin /usr/argagagji
# /usr/bin exists, so this returns a status of 0 (true). It prints nothing.
>_ path is /usr/argagagji
# /usr/argagagji does not, so this returns a status of 1 (false). It also prints nothing.
>_ path is -fx /bin/sh
# /bin/sh is usually an executable file, so this returns true.


"mtime" subcommand

path mtime [-z | --null-in] [-Z | --null-out] [-q | --quiet] [-R | --relative] [PATH ...]


path mtime returns the last modification time ("mtime" in unix jargon) of the given paths, in seconds since the unix epoch (the beginning of the 1st of January 1970).

With --relative (or -R), it prints the number of seconds since the modification time. It only reads the current time once at start, so in case multiple paths are given the times are all relative to the start of path mtime -R running.

If you want to know if a file is newer or older than another file, consider using test -nt instead. See the test documentation.

It returns 0 if reading mtime for any path succeeded.

Examples

>_ date +%s
# This prints the current time as seconds since the epoch
1657217847
>_ path mtime /etc/
1657213796
>_ path mtime -R /etc/
4078
# So /etc/ on this system was last modified a little over an hour ago
# This is the same as
>_ math (date +%s) - (path mtime /etc/)


"normalize" subcommand

path normalize [-z | --null-in] [-Z | --null-out] [-q | --quiet] [PATH ...]


path normalize returns the normalized versions of all paths. That means it squashes duplicate "/", collapses "../" with earlier components and removes "." components.

Unlike realpath or path resolve, it does not make the paths absolute. It also does not resolve any symlinks. As such it can operate on non-existent paths.

Because it operates on paths as strings and doesn't resolve symlinks, it works sort of like pwd -L and cd. E.g. path normalize link/.. will return ., just like cd link; cd .. would return to the current directory. For a physical view of the filesystem, see path resolve.

Leading "./" components are usually removed. But when a path starts with -, path normalize will add it instead to avoid confusion with options.

It returns 0 if any normalization was done, i.e. any given path wasn't in canonical form.

Examples

>_ path normalize /usr/bin//../../etc/fish
# The "//" is squashed and the ".." components neutralize the components before
/etc/fish
>_ path normalize /bin//bash
# The "//" is squashed, but /bin isn't resolved even if your system links it to /usr/bin.
/bin/bash
>_ path normalize ./my/subdirs/../sub2
my/sub2
>_ path normalize -- -/foo
./-/foo


"resolve" subcommand

path resolve [-z | --null-in] [-Z | --null-out] [-q | --quiet] [PATH ...]


path resolve returns the normalized, physical and absolute versions of all paths. That means it resolves symlinks and does what path normalize does: it squashes duplicate "/", collapses "../" with earlier components and removes "." components. Then it turns that path into the absolute path starting from the filesystem root "/".

It is similar to realpath, as it creates the "real", canonical version of the path. However, for paths that can't be resolved, e.g. if they don't exist or form a symlink loop, it will resolve as far as it can and normalize the rest.

Because it resolves symlinks, it works sort of like pwd -P. E.g. path resolve link/.. will return the parent directory of what the link points to, just like cd link; cd (pwd -P)/.. would go to it. For a logical view of the filesystem, see path normalize.

It returns 0 if any normalization or resolution was done, i.e. any given path wasn't in canonical form.

Examples

>_ path resolve /bin//sh
# The "//" is squashed, and /bin is resolved if your system links it to /usr/bin.
# sh here is bash (this is common on linux systems)
/usr/bin/bash
>_ path resolve /bin/foo///bar/../baz
# Assuming /bin exists and is a symlink to /usr/bin, but /bin/foo doesn't.
# This resolves the /bin/ and normalizes the nonexistent rest:
/usr/bin/foo/baz


"change-extension" subcommand

path change-extension [-z | --null-in] [-Z | --null-out] \

[-q | --quiet] EXTENSION [PATH ...]


path change-extension returns the given paths, with their extension changed to the given new extension. The extension is the part after (and including) the last ".", unless that "." followed a "/" or the basename is "." or "..", in which case there is no previous extension and the new one is simply added.

If the extension is empty, any previous extension is stripped, along with the ".". This is, of course, the inverse of path extension.

One leading dot on the extension is ignored, so ".mp3" and "mp3" are treated the same.

It returns 0 if it was given any paths.

Examples

>_ path change-extension mp4 ./foo.wmv
./foo.mp4
>_ path change-extension .mp4 ./foo.wmv
./foo.mp4
>_ path change-extension '' ../banana
../banana
>_ path change-extension '' ~/.config
/home/alfa/.config
>_ path change-extension '' ~/.config.d
/home/alfa/.config
>_ path change-extension '' ~/.config.
/home/alfa/.config


"sort" subcommand

path sort [-z | --null-in] [-Z | --null-out] \

[-q | --quiet] [-r | --reverse] \
[--key=basename|dirname|path] [PATH ...]


path sort returns the given paths in sorted order. They are sorted in the same order as globs - alphabetically, but with runs of numerical digits compared numerically.

With --reverse or -r the sort is reversed.

With --key= only the given part of the path is compared, e.g. --key=dirname causes only the dirname to be compared, --key=basename only the basename and --key=path causes the entire path to be compared (this is the default).

With --unique or -u the sort is deduplicated, meaning only the first of a run that have the same key is kept. So if you are sorting by basename, then only the first of each basename is used.

The sort used is stable, so sorting first by basename and then by dirname works and causes the files to be grouped according to directory.

It currently returns 0 if it was given any paths.

Examples

>_ path sort 10-foo 2-bar
2-bar
10-foo
>_ path sort --reverse 10-foo 2-bar
10-foo
2-bar
>_ path sort --unique --key=basename $fish_function_path/*.fish
# prints a list of all function files fish would use, sorted by name.


Combining path

path is meant to be easy to combine with itself, other tools and fish.

This is why

  • path's output is automatically split by fish if it goes into a command substitution, so just doing (path ...) handles all paths, even those containing newlines, correctly
  • path has --null-in to handle null-delimited input (typically automatically detected!), and --null-out to pass on null-delimited output

Some examples of combining path:

# Expand all paths in the current directory, leave only executable files, and print their resolved path
path filter -zZ -xf -- * | path resolve -z
# The same thing, but using find (note -maxdepth needs to come first or find will scream)
# (this also depends on your particular version of find)
# Note the `-z` is unnecessary for any sensible version of find - if `path` sees a NULL,
# it will split on NULL automatically.
find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -executable -print0 | path resolve -z
set -l paths (path filter -p exec $PATH/fish -Z | path resolve)


popd - move through directory stack

Synopsis

popd

Description

popd removes the top directory from the directory stack and changes the working directory to the new top directory. Use pushd to add directories to the stack.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Example

pushd /usr/src
# Working directory is now /usr/src
# Directory stack contains /usr/src
pushd /usr/src/fish-shell
# Working directory is now /usr/src/fish-shell
# Directory stack contains /usr/src /usr/src/fish-shell
popd
# Working directory is now /usr/src
# Directory stack contains /usr/src


See Also

  • the dirs command to print the directory stack
  • the cdh command which provides a more intuitive way to navigate to recently visited directories.

prevd - move backward through directory history

Synopsis

prevd [-l | --list] [POS]

Description

prevd moves backwards POS positions in the history of visited directories; if the beginning of the history has been hit, a warning is printed.

If the -l or --list flag is specified, the current history is also displayed.

Note that the cd command limits directory history to the 25 most recently visited directories. The history is stored in the dirprev and dirnext variables which this command manipulates.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Example

cd /usr/src
# Working directory is now /usr/src
cd /usr/src/fish-shell
# Working directory is now /usr/src/fish-shell
prevd
# Working directory is now /usr/src
nextd
# Working directory is now /usr/src/fish-shell


See Also

  • the cdh command to display a prompt to quickly navigate the history
  • the dirh command to print the directory history
  • the nextd command to move forward

printf - display text according to a format string

Synopsis

printf FORMAT [ARGUMENT ...]

Description

NOTE: This page documents the fish builtin printf. To see the documentation on any non-fish versions, use command man printf.

printf uses the format string FORMAT to print the ARGUMENT arguments. This means that it takes format specifiers in the format string and replaces each with an argument.

The FORMAT argument is re-used as many times as necessary to convert all of the given arguments. So printf %s\n flounder catfish clownfish shark will print four lines.

Unlike echo, printf does not append a new line unless it is specified as part of the string.

It doesn't support any options, so there is no need for a -- separator, which makes it easier to use for arbitrary input than echo. [1]

Format Specifiers

Valid format specifiers are taken from the C library function printf(3):

  • %d or %i: Argument will be used as decimal integer (signed or unsigned)
  • %o: An octal unsigned integer
  • %u: An unsigned decimal integer - this means negative numbers will wrap around
  • %x or %X: An unsigned hexadecimal integer
  • %f, %g or %G: A floating-point number. %f defaults to 6 places after the decimal point (which is locale-dependent - e.g. in de_DE it will be a ,). %g and %G will trim trailing zeroes and switch to scientific notation (like %e) if the numbers get small or large enough.
  • %e or %E: A floating-point number in scientific (XXXeYY) notation
  • %s: A string
  • %b: As a string, interpreting backslash escapes, except that octal escapes are of the form 0 or 0ooo.

%% signifies a literal "%".

Conversion can fail, e.g. "102.234" can't losslessly convert to an integer, causing printf to print an error. If you are okay with losing information, silence errors with 2>/dev/null.

A number between the % and the format letter specifies the width. The result will be left-padded with spaces.

Backslash Escapes

printf also knows a number of backslash escapes:

  • \" double quote
  • \\ backslash
  • \a alert (bell)
  • \b backspace
  • \c produce no further output
  • \e escape
  • \f form feed
  • \n new line
  • \r carriage return
  • \t horizontal tab
  • \v vertical tab
  • \ooo octal number (ooo is 1 to 3 digits)
  • \xhh hexadecimal number (hhh is 1 to 2 digits)
  • \uhhhh 16-bit Unicode character (hhhh is 4 digits)
  • \Uhhhhhhhh 32-bit Unicode character (hhhhhhhh is 8 digits)

Errors and Return Status

If the given argument doesn't work for the given format (like when you try to convert a number like 3.141592 to an integer), printf prints an error, to stderr. printf will then also return non-zero, but will still try to print as much as it can.

It will also return non-zero if no argument at all was given, in which case it will print nothing.

This printf has been imported from the printf in GNU Coreutils version 6.9. If you would like to use a newer version of printf, for example the one shipped with your OS, try command printf.

Example

printf '%s\t%s\n' flounder fish


Will print "flounder fish" (separated with a tab character), followed by a newline character. This is useful for writing completions, as fish expects completion scripts to output the option followed by the description, separated with a tab character.

printf '%s: %d' "Number of bananas in my pocket" 42


Will print "Number of bananas in my pocket: 42", without a newline.

See Also

the echo command, for simpler output

Footnotes

[1]
In fact, while fish's echo supports --, POSIX forbids it, so other implementations can't be used if the input contains anything starting with -.

prompt_hostname - print the hostname, shortened for use in the prompt

Synopsis

prompt_hostname

Description

prompt_hostname prints a shortened version the current hostname for use in the prompt. It will print just the first component of the hostname, everything up to the first dot.

Examples

function fish_prompt

echo -n (whoami)@(prompt_hostname) (prompt_pwd) '$ ' end


# The machine's full hostname is foo.bar.com
>_ prompt_hostname
foo


prompt_login - describe the login suitable for prompt

Synopsis

prompt_login

Description

prompt_login is a function to describe the current login. It will show the user, the host and also whether the shell is running in a chroot (currently Debian's debian_chroot file is supported).

Examples

function fish_prompt

echo -n (prompt_login) (prompt_pwd) '$ ' end


>_ prompt_login
root@bananablaster


prompt_pwd - print pwd suitable for prompt

Synopsis

prompt_pwd

Description

prompt_pwd is a function to print the current working directory in a way suitable for prompts. It will replace the home directory with "~" and shorten every path component but the last to a default of one character.

To change the number of characters per path component, pass --dir-length= or set fish_prompt_pwd_dir_length to the number of characters. Setting it to 0 or an invalid value will disable shortening entirely. This defaults to 1.

To keep some components unshortened, pass --full-length-dirs= or set fish_prompt_pwd_full_dirs to the number of components. This defaults to 1, keeping the last component.

If any positional arguments are given, prompt_pwd shortens them instead of PWD.

Options

Causes the components to be shortened to MAX characters each. This overrides fish_prompt_pwd_dir_length.
Keeps NUM components (counted from the right) as full length without shortening. This overrides fish_prompt_pwd_full_dirs.
Displays help about using this command.

Examples

>_ cd ~/
>_ echo $PWD
/home/alfa
>_ prompt_pwd
~
>_ cd /tmp/banana/sausage/with/mustard
>_ prompt_pwd
/t/b/s/w/mustard
>_ set -g fish_prompt_pwd_dir_length 3
>_ prompt_pwd
/tmp/ban/sau/wit/mustard
>_ prompt_pwd --full-length-dirs=2 --dir-length=1
/t/b/s/with/mustard


psub - perform process substitution

Synopsis

COMMAND1 ( COMMAND2 | psub [-F | --fifo] [-f | --file] [(-s | --suffix) SUFFIX] )

Description

Some shells (e.g., ksh, bash) feature a syntax that is a mix between command substitution and piping, called process substitution. It is used to send the output of a command into the calling command, much like command substitution, but with the difference that the output is not sent through commandline arguments but through a named pipe, with the filename of the named pipe sent as an argument to the calling program. psub combined with a regular command substitution provides the same functionality.

The following options are available:

Use a regular file instead of a named pipe to communicate with the calling process. This will cause psub to be significantly slower when large amounts of data are involved, but has the advantage that the reading process can seek in the stream. This is the default.
Use a named pipe rather than a file. You should only use this if the command produces no more than 8 KiB of output. The limit on the amount of data a FIFO can buffer varies with the OS but is typically 8 KiB, 16 KiB or 64 KiB. If you use this option and the command on the left of the psub pipeline produces more output a deadlock is likely to occur.
Append SUFFIX to the filename.
Displays help about using this command.

Example

diff (sort a.txt | psub) (sort b.txt | psub)
# shows the difference between the sorted versions of files ``a.txt`` and ``b.txt``.
source-highlight -f esc (cpp main.c | psub -f -s .c)
# highlights ``main.c`` after preprocessing as a C source.


pushd - push directory to directory stack

Synopsis

pushd DIRECTORY

Description

The pushd function adds DIRECTORY to the top of the directory stack and makes it the current working directory. popd will pop it off and return to the original directory.

Without arguments, it exchanges the top two directories in the stack.

pushd +NUMBER rotates the stack counter-clockwise i.e. from bottom to top

pushd -NUMBER rotates clockwise i.e. top to bottom.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Example

cd ~/dir1
pushd ~/dir2
pushd ~/dir3
# Working directory is now ~/dir3
# Directory stack contains ~/dir2 ~/dir1
pushd /tmp
# Working directory is now /tmp
# Directory stack contains ~/dir3 ~/dir2 ~/dir1
pushd +1
# Working directory is now ~/dir3
# Directory stack contains ~/dir2 ~/dir1 /tmp
popd
# Working directory is now ~/dir2
# Directory stack contains ~/dir1 /tmp


See Also

  • the dirs command to print the directory stack
  • the cdh command which provides a more intuitive way to navigate to recently visited directories.

pwd - output the current working directory

Synopsis

pwd [-P | --physical]
pwd [-L | --logical]

Description

NOTE: This page documents the fish builtin pwd. To see the documentation on any non-fish versions, use command man pwd.

pwd outputs (prints) the current working directory.

The following options are available:

Output the logical working directory, without resolving symlinks (default behavior).
Output the physical working directory, with symlinks resolved.
Displays help about using this command.

See Also

Navigate directories using the directory history or the directory stack

random - generate random number

Synopsis

random
random SEED
random START END
random START STEP END
random choice [ITEMS ...]

Description

random generates a pseudo-random integer from a uniform distribution. The range (inclusive) depends on the arguments.

No arguments indicate a range of 0 to 32767 (inclusive).

If one argument is specified, the internal engine will be seeded with the argument for future invocations of random and no output will be produced.

Two arguments indicate a range from START to END (both START and END included).

Three arguments indicate a range from START to END with a spacing of STEP between possible outputs.

random choice will select one random item from the succeeding arguments.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Note that seeding the engine will NOT give the same result across different systems.

You should not consider random cryptographically secure, or even statistically accurate.

Example

The following code will count down from a random even number between 10 and 20 to 1:

for i in (seq (random 10 2 20) -1 1)

echo $i end


And this will open a random picture from any of the subdirectories:

open (random choice **.jpg)


Or, to only get even numbers from 2 to 20:

random 2 2 20


Or odd numbers from 1 to 3:

random 1 2 3 # or 1 2 4


read - read line of input into variables

Synopsis

read [OPTIONS] [VARIABLE ...]

Description

NOTE: This page documents the fish builtin read. To see the documentation on any non-fish versions, use command man read.

read reads from standard input and stores the result in shell variables. In an alternative mode, it can also print to its own standard output, for example for use in command substitutions.

By default, read reads a single line and splits it into variables on spaces or tabs. Alternatively, a null character or a maximum number of characters can be used to terminate the input, and other delimiters can be given.

Unlike other shells, there is no default variable (such as REPLY) for storing the result - instead, it is printed on standard output.

When read reaches the end-of-file (EOF) instead of the terminator, the exit status is set to 1. Otherwise, it is set to 0.

If read sets a variable and you don't specify a scope, it will use the same rules that set - display and change shell variables does - if the variable exists, it will use it (in the lowest scope). If it doesn't, it will use an unexported function-scoped variable.

The following options, like the corresponding ones in set - display and change shell variables, control variable scope or attributes:

Sets a universal variable. The variable will be immediately available to all the user's fish instances on the machine, and will be persisted across restarts of the shell.
Sets a variable scoped to the executing function. It is erased when the function ends.
Sets a locally-scoped variable in this block. It is erased when the block ends. Outside of a block, this is the same as --function.
Sets a globally-scoped variable. Global variables are available to all functions running in the same shell. They can be modified or erased.
Prevents the variables from being exported to child processes (default behaviour).
Exports the variables to child processes.

The following options control the interactive mode:

Sets the initial string in the interactive mode command buffer to CMD.
Masks characters written to the terminal, replacing them with asterisks. This is useful for reading things like passwords or other sensitive information.
Uses the output of the shell command PROMPT_CMD as the prompt for the interactive mode. The default prompt command is set_color green; echo -n read; set_color normal; echo -n "> "
Uses the literal PROMPT_STR as the prompt for the interactive mode.
Uses the output of the shell command RIGHT_PROMPT_CMD as the right prompt for the interactive mode. There is no default right prompt command.
Enables syntax highlighting, tab completions and command termination suitable for entering shellscript code in the interactive mode. NOTE: Prior to fish 3.0, the short opt for --shell was -s, but it has been changed for compatibility with bash's -s short opt for --silent.

The following options control how much is read and how it is stored:

Splits on DELIMITER. DELIMITER will be used as an entire string to split on, not a set of characters.
Makes read return after reading NCHARS characters or the end of the line, whichever comes first.
Causes read to split the input into variables by the shell's tokenization rules. This means it will honor quotes and escaping. This option is of course incompatible with other options to control splitting like --delimiter and does not honor IFS (like fish's tokenizer). It saves the tokens in the manner they'd be passed to commands on the commandline, so e.g. a\ b is stored as a b. Note that currently it leaves command substitutions intact along with the parentheses.
Stores the result as a list in a single variable. This option is also available as --array for backwards compatibility.
Marks the end of the line with the NUL character, instead of newline. This also disables interactive mode.
Reads each line into successive variables, and stops after each variable has been filled. This cannot be combined with the --delimiter option.

Without the --line option, read reads a single line of input from standard input, breaks it into tokens, and then assigns one token to each variable specified in VARIABLES. If there are more tokens than variables, the complete remainder is assigned to the last variable.

If no option to determine how to split like --delimiter, --line or --tokenize is given, the variable IFS is used as a list of characters to split on. Relying on the use of IFS is deprecated and this behaviour will be removed in future versions. The default value of IFS contains space, tab and newline characters. As a special case, if IFS is set to the empty string, each character of the input is considered a separate token.

With the --line option, read reads a line of input from standard input into each provided variable, stopping when each variable has been filled. The line is not tokenized.

If no variable names are provided, read enters a special case that simply provides redirection from standard input to standard output, useful for command substitution. For instance, the fish shell command below can be used to read a password from the console instead of hardcoding it in the command itself, which prevents it from showing up in fish's history:

mysql -uuser -p(read)


When running in this mode, read does not split the input in any way and text is redirected to standard output without any further processing or manipulation.

If -l or --list is provided, only one variable name is allowed and the tokens are stored as a list in this variable.

In order to protect the shell from consuming too many system resources, read will only consume a maximum of 100 MiB (104857600 bytes); if the terminator is not reached before this limit then VARIABLE is set to empty and the exit status is set to 122. This limit can be altered with the fish_read_limit variable. If set to 0 (zero), the limit is removed.

Example

read has a few separate uses.

The following code stores the value 'hello' in the shell variable foo.

echo hello | read foo


The while command is a neat way to handle command output line-by-line:

printf '%s\n' line1 line2 line3 line4 | while read -l foo

echo "This is another line: $foo"
end


Delimiters given via "-d" are taken as one string:

echo a==b==c | read -d == -l a b c
echo $a # a
echo $b # b
echo $c # c


--tokenize honors quotes and escaping like the shell's argument passing:

echo 'a\ b' | read -t first second
echo $first # outputs "a b", $second is empty
echo 'a"foo bar"b (command echo wurst)*" "{a,b}' | read -lt -l a b c
echo $a # outputs 'afoo barb' (without the quotes)
echo $b # outputs '(command echo wurst)* {a,b}' (without the quotes)
echo $c # nothing


For an example on interactive use, see Querying for user input.

Synopsis

realpath [OPTIONS] PATH

Description

NOTE: This page documents the fish builtin realpath. To see the documentation on any non-fish versions, use command man realpath.

realpath follows all symbolic links encountered for the provided PATH, printing the absolute path resolved. fish provides a realpath-alike builtin intended to enrich systems where no such command is installed by default.

If a realpath command exists, that will be preferred. builtin realpath will explicitly use the fish implementation of realpath.

The following options are available:

Don't resolve symlinks, only make paths absolute, squash multiple slashes and remove trailing slashes.
Displays help about using this command.

return - stop the current inner function

Synopsis

return [N]

Description

return halts a currently running function. The exit status is set to N if it is given. If return is invoked outside of a function or dot script it is equivalent to exit.

It is often added inside of a conditional block such as an if statement or a switch statement to conditionally stop the executing function and return to the caller; it can also be used to specify the exit status of a function.

If at the top level of a script, it exits with the given status, like exit. If at the top level in an interactive session, it will set status, but not exit the shell.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Example

An implementation of the false command as a fish function:

function false

return 1 end


set - display and change shell variables

Synopsis

set
set (-f | --function) (-l | --local) (-g | --global) (-U | --universal) [--no-event]
set [-Uflg] NAME [VALUE ...]
set [-Uflg] NAME[[INDEX ...]] [VALUE ...]
set (-x | --export) (-u | --unexport) [-Uflg] NAME [VALUE ...]
set (-a | --append) (-p | --prepend) [-Uflg] NAME VALUE ...
set (-q | --query) (-e | --erase) [-Uflg] [NAME][[INDEX]] ...]
set (-S | --show) (-L | --long) [NAME ...]

Description

set manipulates shell variables.

If both NAME and VALUE are provided, set assigns any values to variable NAME. Variables in fish are lists, multiple values are allowed. One or more variable INDEX can be specified including ranges (not for all options.)

If no VALUE is given, the variable will be set to the empty list.

If set is ran without arguments, it prints the names and values of all shell variables in sorted order. Passing scope or export flags allows filtering this to only matching variables, so set --local would only show local variables.

With --erase and optionally a scope flag set will erase the matching variable (or the variable of that name in the smallest possible scope).

With --show, set will describe the given variable names, explaining how they have been defined - in which scope with which values and options.

The following options control variable scope:

Sets a universal variable. The variable will be immediately available to all the user's fish instances on the machine, and will be persisted across restarts of the shell.
Sets a variable scoped to the executing function. It is erased when the function ends.
Sets a locally-scoped variable in this block. It is erased when the block ends. Outside of a block, this is the same as --function.
Sets a globally-scoped variable. Global variables are available to all functions running in the same shell. They can be modified or erased.

These options modify how variables operate:

Causes the specified shell variable to be exported to child processes (making it an "environment variable").
Causes the specified shell variable to NOT be exported to child processes.
Treat specified variable as a path variable; variable will be split on colons (:) and will be displayed joined by colons when quoted (echo "$PATH") or exported.
Causes variable to no longer be treated as a path variable. Note: variables ending in "PATH" are automatically path variables.

Further options:

Appends VALUES to the current set of values for variable NAME. Can be used with --prepend to both append and prepend at the same time. This cannot be used when assigning to a variable slice.
Prepends VALUES to the current set of values for variable NAME. This can be used with --append to both append and prepend at the same time. This cannot be used when assigning to a variable slice.
Causes the specified shell variables to be erased. Supports erasing from multiple scopes at once. Individual items in a variable at INDEX in brackets can be specified.
Test if the specified variable names are defined. If an INDEX is provided, check for items at that slot. Does not output anything, but the shell status is set to the number of variables specified that were not defined, up to a maximum of 255. If no variable was given, it also returns 255.
List only the names of all defined variables, not their value. The names are guaranteed to be sorted.
Shows information about the given variables. If no variable names are given then all variables are shown in sorted order. It shows the scopes the given variables are set in, along with the values in each and whether or not it is exported. No other flags can be used with this option.
Don't generate a variable change event when setting or erasing a variable. We recommend using this carefully because the event handlers are usually set up for a reason. Possible uses include modifying the variable inside a variable handler.
Do not abbreviate long values when printing set variables.
Displays help about using this command.

If a variable is set to more than one value, the variable will be a list with the specified elements. If a variable is set to zero elements, it will become a list with zero elements.

If the variable name is one or more list elements, such as PATH[1 3 7], only those list elements specified will be changed. If you specify a negative index when expanding or assigning to a list variable, the index will be calculated from the end of the list. For example, the index -1 means the last index of a list.

The scoping rules when creating or updating a variable are:

  • Variables may be explicitly set as universal, global, function, or local. Variables with the same name but in a different scope will not be changed.
  • If the scope of a variable is not explicitly set but a variable by that name has been previously defined, the scope of the existing variable is used. If the variable is already defined in multiple scopes, the variable with the narrowest scope will be updated.
  • If a variable's scope is not explicitly set and there is no existing variable by that name, the variable will be local to the currently executing function. Note that this is different from using the -l or --local flag, in which case the variable will be local to the most-inner currently executing block, while without them the variable will be local to the function as a whole. If no function is executing, the variable will be set in the global scope.

The exporting rules when creating or updating a variable are identical to the scoping rules for variables:

  • Variables may be explicitly set to either exported or not exported. When an exported variable goes out of scope, it is unexported.
  • If a variable is not explicitly set to be exported or not exported, but has been previously defined, the previous exporting rule for the variable is kept.
  • If a variable is not explicitly set to be either exported or unexported and has never before been defined, the variable will not be exported.

In query mode, the scope to be examined can be specified. Whether the variable has to be a path variable or exported can also be specified.

In erase mode, if variable indices are specified, only the specified slices of the list variable will be erased.

set requires all options to come before any other arguments. For example, set flags -l will have the effect of setting the value of the variable flags to '-l', not making the variable local.

Exit status

In assignment mode, set does not modify the exit status, but passes along whatever status was set, including by command substitutions. This allows capturing the output and exit status of a subcommand, like in if set output (command).

In query mode, the exit status is the number of variables that were not found.

In erase mode, set exits with a zero exit status in case of success, with a non-zero exit status if the commandline was invalid, if any of the variables did not exist or was a special read-only variable.

Examples

Print all global, exported variables:

> set -gx


Set the value of the variable _$foo_ to be 'hi'.:

> set foo hi


Append the value "there" to the variable $foo:

> set -a foo there


Remove _$smurf_ from the scope:

> set -e smurf


Remove _$smurf_ from the global and universal scopes:

> set -e -Ug smurf


Change the fourth element of the $PATH list to ~/bin:

> set PATH[4] ~/bin


Outputs the path to Python if type -p returns true:

if set python_path (type -p python)

echo "Python is at $python_path" end


Setting a variable doesn't modify $status; a command substitution still will, though:

> echo $status
0
> false
> set foo bar
> echo $status
1
> true
> set foo banana (false)
> echo $status
1


VAR=VALUE command sets a variable for just one command, like other shells. This runs fish with a temporary home directory:

> HOME=(mktemp -d) fish


(which is essentially the same as):

> begin; set -lx HOME (mktemp -d); fish; end


Notes

Fish versions prior to 3.0 supported the syntax set PATH[1] PATH[4] /bin /sbin, which worked like set PATH[1 4] /bin /sbin.

set_color - set the terminal color

Synopsis

set_color [OPTIONS] VALUE

Description

set_color is used to control the color and styling of text in the terminal. VALUE describes that styling. VALUE can be a reserved color name like red or an RGB color value given as 3 or 6 hexadecimal digits ("F27" or "FF2277"). A special keyword normal resets text formatting to terminal defaults.

Valid colors include:

  • black, red, green, yellow, blue, magenta, cyan, white
  • brblack, brred, brgreen, bryellow, brblue, brmagenta, brcyan, brwhite



The br- (as in 'bright') forms are full-brightness variants of the 8 standard-brightness colors on many terminals. brblack has higher brightness than black - towards gray.

An RGB value with three or six hex digits, such as A0FF33 or f2f can be used. Fish will choose the closest supported color. A three digit value is equivalent to specifying each digit twice; e.g., set_color 2BC is the same as set_color 22BBCC. Hexadecimal RGB values can be in lower or uppercase. Depending on the capabilities of your terminal (and the level of support set_color has for it) the actual color may be approximated by a nearby matching reserved color name or set_color may not have an effect on color.

A second color may be given as a desired fallback color. e.g. set_color 124212 brblue will instruct set_color to use brblue if a terminal is not capable of the exact shade of grey desired. This is very useful when an 8 or 16 color terminal might otherwise not use a color.

The following options are available:

Sets the background color.
Prints the given colors or a colored list of the 16 named colors.
Sets bold mode.
Sets dim mode.
Sets italics mode.
Sets reverse mode.
Sets underlined mode.
Displays help about using this command.

Using the normal keyword will reset foreground, background, and all formatting back to default.

Notes

1.
Using the normal keyword will reset both background and foreground colors to whatever is the default for the terminal.
2.
Setting the background color only affects subsequently written characters. Fish provides no way to set the background color for the entire terminal window. Configuring the window background color (and other attributes such as its opacity) has to be done using whatever mechanisms the terminal provides. Look for a config option.
3.
Some terminals use the --bold escape sequence to switch to a brighter color set rather than increasing the weight of text.
4.
set_color works by printing sequences of characters to standard output. If used in command substitution or a pipe, these characters will also be captured. This may or may not be desirable. Checking the exit status of isatty stdout before using set_color can be useful to decide not to colorize output in a script.

Examples

set_color red; echo "Roses are red"
set_color blue; echo "Violets are blue"
set_color 62A; echo "Eggplants are dark purple"
set_color normal; echo "Normal is nice" # Resets the background too


Terminal Capability Detection

Fish uses some heuristics to determine what colors a terminal supports to avoid sending sequences that it won't understand.

In particular it will:

  • Enable 256 colors if TERM contains "xterm", except for known exceptions (like MacOS 10.6 Terminal.app)
  • Enable 24-bit ("true-color") even if the $TERM entry only reports 256 colors. This includes modern xterm, VTE-based terminals like Gnome Terminal, Konsole and iTerm2.
  • Detect support for italics, dim, reverse and other modes.

If terminfo reports 256 color support for a terminal, 256 color support will always be enabled.

To force true-color support on or off, set fish_term24bit to "1" for on and 0 for off - set -g fish_term24bit 1.

To debug color palette problems, tput colors may be useful to see the number of colors in terminfo for a terminal. Fish launched as fish -d term_support will include diagnostic messages that indicate the color support mode in use.

The set_color command uses the terminfo database to look up how to change terminal colors on whatever terminal is in use. Some systems have old and incomplete terminfo databases, and lack color information for terminals that support it. Fish assumes that all terminals can use the ANSI X3.64 <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code> escape sequences if the terminfo definition indicates a color below 16 is not supported.

source - evaluate contents of file

Synopsis

source FILE [ARGUMENTS ...]
SOMECOMMAND | source
. FILE [ARGUMENTS ...]

Description

source evaluates the commands of the specified FILE in the current shell as a new block of code. This is different from starting a new process to perform the commands (i.e. fish < FILE) since the commands will be evaluated by the current shell, which means that changes in shell variables will affect the current shell. If additional arguments are specified after the file name, they will be inserted into the argv variable. The argv variable will not include the name of the sourced file.

fish will search the working directory to resolve relative paths but will not search PATH .

If no file is specified and stdin is not the terminal, or if the file name - is used, stdin will be read.

The exit status of source is the exit status of the last job to execute. If something goes wrong while opening or reading the file, source exits with a non-zero status.

Some other shells only support the . alias (a single period). The use of . is deprecated in favour of source, and . will be removed in a future version of fish.

source creates a new local scope; set --local within a sourced block will not affect variables in the enclosing scope.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Example

source ~/.config/fish/config.fish
# Causes fish to re-read its initialization file.


Caveats

In fish versions prior to 2.3.0, the argv variable would have a single element (the name of the sourced file) if no arguments are present. Otherwise, it would contain arguments without the name of the sourced file. That behavior was very confusing and unlike other shells such as bash and zsh.

status - query fish runtime information

Synopsis

status
status is-login
status is-interactive
status is-block
status is-breakpoint
status is-command-substitution
status is-no-job-control
status is-full-job-control
status is-interactive-job-control
status current-command
status current-commandline
status filename
status basename
status dirname
status fish-path
status function
status line-number
status stack-trace
status job-control CONTROL_TYPE
status features
status test-feature FEATURE

Description

With no arguments, status displays a summary of the current login and job control status of the shell.

The following operations (subcommands) are available:

Returns 0 if fish is currently executing a command substitution.
Returns 0 if fish is currently executing a block of code.
Returns 0 if fish is currently showing a prompt in the context of a breakpoint command. See also the fish_breakpoint_prompt function.
Returns 0 if fish is interactive - that is, connected to a keyboard.
Returns 0 if fish is a login shell - that is, if fish should perform login tasks such as setting up PATH.
Returns 0 if full job control is enabled.
Returns 0 if interactive job control is enabled.
Returns 0 if no job control is enabled.
Prints the name of the currently-running function or command, like the deprecated _ variable.
Prints the entirety of the currently-running commandline, inclusive of all jobs and operators.
Prints the filename of the currently-running script. If the current script was called via a symlink, this will return the symlink. If the current script was received by piping into source, then this will return -.
Prints just the filename of the running script, without any path components before.
Prints just the path to the running script, without the actual filename itself. This can be relative to PWD (including just "."), depending on how the script was called. This is the same as passing the filename to dirname(3). It's useful if you want to use other files in the current script's directory or similar.
Prints the absolute path to the currently executing instance of fish. This is a best-effort attempt and the exact output is down to what the platform gives fish. In some cases you might only get "fish".
Prints the name of the currently called function if able, when missing displays "Not a function" (or equivalent translated string).
Prints the line number of the currently running script.
Prints a stack trace of all function calls on the call stack.
Sets the job control type to CONTROL_TYPE, which can be none, full, or interactive.
Lists all available feature flags.
Returns 0 when FEATURE is enabled, 1 if it is disabled, and 2 if it is not recognized.

Notes

For backwards compatibility most subcommands can also be specified as a long or short option. For example, rather than status is-login you can type status --is-login. The flag forms are deprecated and may be removed in a future release (but not before fish 4.0).

You can only specify one subcommand per invocation even if you use the flag form of the subcommand.

string - manipulate strings

Synopsis

string collect [-a | --allow-empty] [-N | --no-trim-newlines] [STRING ...]
string escape [-n | --no-quoted] [--style=] [STRING ...]
string join [-q | --quiet] [-n | --no-empty] SEP [STRING ...]
string join0 [-q | --quiet] [STRING ...]
string length [-q | --quiet] [STRING ...]
string lower [-q | --quiet] [STRING ...]
string match [-a | --all] [-e | --entire] [-i | --ignore-case]

[-g | --groups-only] [-r | --regex] [-n | --index]
[-q | --quiet] [-v | --invert]
PATTERN [STRING ...] string pad [-r | --right] [(-c | --char) CHAR] [(-w | --width) INTEGER]
[STRING ...] string repeat [(-n | --count) COUNT] [(-m | --max) MAX] [-N | --no-newline]
[-q | --quiet] [STRING ...] string repeat [-N | --no-newline] [-q | --quiet] COUNT [STRING ...] string replace [-a | --all] [-f | --filter] [-i | --ignore-case]
[-r | --regex] [-q | --quiet] PATTERN REPLACE [STRING ...] string shorten [(-c | --char) CHARS] [(-m | --max) INTEGER]
[-N | --no-newline] [-l | --left] [-q | --quiet] [STRING ...] string split [(-f | --fields) FIELDS] [(-m | --max) MAX] [-n | --no-empty]
[-q | --quiet] [-r | --right] SEP [STRING ...] string split0 [(-f | --fields) FIELDS] [(-m | --max) MAX] [-n | --no-empty]
[-q | --quiet] [-r | --right] [STRING ...] string sub [(-s | --start) START] [(-e | --end) END] [(-l | --length) LENGTH]
[-q | --quiet] [STRING ...] string trim [-l | --left] [-r | --right] [(-c | --chars) CHARS]
[-q | --quiet] [STRING ...] string unescape [--style=] [STRING ...] string upper [-q | --quiet] [STRING ...]

Description

string performs operations on strings.

STRING arguments are taken from the command line unless standard input is connected to a pipe or a file, in which case they are read from standard input, one STRING per line. It is an error to supply STRING arguments on the command line and on standard input.

Arguments beginning with - are normally interpreted as switches; -- causes the following arguments not to be treated as switches even if they begin with -. Switches and required arguments are recognized only on the command line.

Most subcommands accept a -q or --quiet switch, which suppresses the usual output but exits with the documented status. In this case these commands will quit early, without reading all of the available input.

The following subcommands are available.

"collect" subcommand

string collect [-a | --allow-empty] [-N | --no-trim-newlines] [STRING ...]

string collect collects its input into a single output argument, without splitting the output when used in a command substitution. This is useful when trying to collect multiline output from another command into a variable. Exit status: 0 if any output argument is non-empty, or 1 otherwise.

A command like echo (cmd | string collect) is mostly equivalent to a quoted command substitution (echo "$(cmd)"). The main difference is that the former evaluates to zero or one elements whereas the quoted command substitution always evaluates to one element due to string interpolation.

If invoked with multiple arguments instead of input, string collect preserves each argument separately, where the number of output arguments is equal to the number of arguments given to string collect.

Any trailing newlines on the input are trimmed, just as with "$(cmd)" substitution. Use --no-trim-newlines to disable this behavior, which may be useful when running a command such as set contents (cat filename | string collect -N).

With --allow-empty, string collect always prints one (empty) argument. This can be used to prevent an argument from disappearing.

Examples

>_ echo "zero $(echo one\ntwo\nthree) four"
zero one
two
three four
>_ echo \"(echo one\ntwo\nthree | string collect)\"
"one
two
three"
>_ echo \"(echo one\ntwo\nthree | string collect -N)\"
"one
two
three
"
>_ echo foo(true | string collect --allow-empty)bar
foobar


"escape" and "unescape" subcommands

string escape [-n | --no-quoted] [--style=] [STRING ...]
string unescape [--style=] [STRING ...]

string escape escapes each STRING in one of three ways. The first is --style=script. This is the default. It alters the string such that it can be passed back to eval to produce the original argument again. By default, all special characters are escaped, and quotes are used to simplify the output when possible. If -n or --no-quoted is given, the simplifying quoted format is not used. Exit status: 0 if at least one string was escaped, or 1 otherwise.

--style=var ensures the string can be used as a variable name by hex encoding any non-alphanumeric characters. The string is first converted to UTF-8 before being encoded.

--style=url ensures the string can be used as a URL by hex encoding any character which is not legal in a URL. The string is first converted to UTF-8 before being encoded.

--style=regex escapes an input string for literal matching within a regex expression. The string is first converted to UTF-8 before being encoded.

string unescape performs the inverse of the string escape command. If the string to be unescaped is not properly formatted it is ignored. For example, doing string unescape --style=var (string escape --style=var $str) will return the original string. There is no support for unescaping --style=regex.

Examples

>_ echo \x07 | string escape
\cg
>_ string escape --style=var 'a1 b2'\u6161
a1_20_b2_E6_85_A1_


"join" and "join0" subcommands

string join [-q | --quiet] SEP [STRING ...]
string join0 [-q | --quiet] [STRING ...]

string join joins its STRING arguments into a single string separated by SEP, which can be an empty string. Exit status: 0 if at least one join was performed, or 1 otherwise. If -n or --no-empty is specified, empty strings are excluded from consideration (e.g. string join -n + a b "" c would expand to a+b+c not a+b++c).

string join0 joins its STRING arguments into a single string separated by the zero byte (NUL), and adds a trailing NUL. This is most useful in conjunction with tools that accept NUL-delimited input, such as sort -z. Exit status: 0 if at least one join was performed, or 1 otherwise.

Because Unix uses NUL as the string terminator, passing the output of string join0 as an argument to a command (via a command substitution) won't actually work. Fish will pass the correct bytes along, but the command won't be able to tell where the argument ends. This is a limitation of Unix' argument passing.

Examples

>_ seq 3 | string join ...
1...2...3
# Give a list of NUL-separated filenames to du (this is a GNU extension)
>_ string join0 file1 file2 file\nwith\nmultiple\nlines | du --files0-from=-
# Just put the strings together without a separator
>_ string join '' a b c
abc


"length" subcommand

string length [-q | --quiet] [-V | --visible] [STRING ...]

string length reports the length of each string argument in characters. Exit status: 0 if at least one non-empty STRING was given, or 1 otherwise.

With -V or --visible, it uses the visible width of the arguments. That means it will discount escape sequences fish knows about, account for $fish_emoji_width and $fish_ambiguous_width. It will also count each line (separated by \n) on its own, and with a carriage return (\r) count only the widest stretch on a line. The intent is to measure the number of columns the STRING would occupy in the current terminal.

Examples

>_ string length 'hello, world'
12
>_ set str foo
>_ string length -q $str; echo $status
0
# Equivalent to test -n "$str"
>_ string length --visible (set_color red)foobar
# the set_color is discounted, so this is the width of "foobar"
6
>_ string length --visible 🐟🐟🐟🐟
# depending on $fish_emoji_width, this is either 4 or 8
# in new terminals it should be
8
>_ string length --visible abcdef\r123
# this displays as "123def", so the width is 6
6
>_ string length --visible a\nbc
# counts "a" and "bc" as separate lines, so it prints width for each
1
2


"lower" subcommand

string lower [-q | --quiet] [STRING ...]

string lower converts each string argument to lowercase. Exit status: 0 if at least one string was converted to lowercase, else 1. This means that in conjunction with the -q flag you can readily test whether a string is already lowercase.

"match" subcommand

string match [-a | --all] [-e | --entire] [-i | --ignore-case]

[-g | --groups-only] [-r | --regex] [-n | --index]
[-q | --quiet] [-v | --invert] [(-m | --max-matches) MAX]
PATTERN [STRING ...]

string match tests each STRING against PATTERN and prints matching substrings. Only the first match for each STRING is reported unless -a or --all is given, in which case all matches are reported.

If you specify the -e or --entire then each matching string is printed including any prefix or suffix not matched by the pattern (equivalent to grep without the -o flag). You can, obviously, achieve the same result by prepending and appending * or .* depending on whether or not you have specified the --regex flag. The --entire flag is simply a way to avoid having to complicate the pattern in that fashion and make the intent of the string match clearer. Without --entire and --regex, a PATTERN will need to match the entire STRING before it will be reported.

Matching can be made case-insensitive with --ignore-case or -i.

If --groups-only or -g is given, only the capturing groups will be reported - meaning the full match will be skipped. This is incompatible with --entire and --invert, and requires --regex. It is useful as a simple cutting tool instead of string replace, so you can simply choose "this part" of a string.

If --index or -n is given, each match is reported as a 1-based start position and a length. By default, PATTERN is interpreted as a glob pattern matched against each entire STRING argument. A glob pattern is only considered a valid match if it matches the entire STRING.

If --regex or -r is given, PATTERN is interpreted as a Perl-compatible regular expression, which does not have to match the entire STRING. For a regular expression containing capturing groups, multiple items will be reported for each match, one for the entire match and one for each capturing group. With this, only the matching part of the STRING will be reported, unless --entire is given.

When matching via regular expressions, string match automatically sets variables for all named capturing groups ((?<name>expression)). It will create a variable with the name of the group, in the default scope, for each named capturing group, and set it to the value of the capturing group in the first matched argument. If a named capture group matched an empty string, the variable will be set to the empty string (like set var ""). If it did not match, the variable will be set to nothing (like set var). When --regex is used with --all, this behavior changes. Each named variable will contain a list of matches, with the first match contained in the first element, the second match in the second, and so on. If the group was empty or did not match, the corresponding element will be an empty string.

If --invert or -v is used the selected lines will be only those which do not match the given glob pattern or regular expression.

If --max-matches MAX or -m MAX is used, string will stop checking for matches after MAX lines of input have matched. This can be used as an "early exit" optimization when processing long inputs but expecting a limited and fixed number of outputs that might be found considerably before the input stream has been exhausted. If combined with --invert or -v, considers only inverted matches.

Exit status: 0 if at least one match was found, or 1 otherwise.

Match Glob Examples

>_ string match '?' a
a
>_ string match 'a*b' axxb
axxb
>_ string match -i 'a??B' Axxb
Axxb
>_ string match -- '-*' -h foo --version bar
# To match things that look like options, we need a `--`
# to tell string its options end there.
-h
--version
>_ echo 'ok?' | string match '*\?'
ok?
# Note that only the second STRING will match here.
>_ string match 'foo' 'foo1' 'foo' 'foo2'
foo
>_ string match -e 'foo' 'foo1' 'foo' 'foo2'
foo1
foo
foo2
>_ string match 'foo?' 'foo1' 'foo' 'foo2'
foo1
foo2


Match Regex Examples

>_ string match -r 'cat|dog|fish' 'nice dog'
dog
>_ string match -r -v "c.*[12]" {cat,dog}(seq 1 4)
dog1
dog2
cat3
dog3
cat4
dog4
>_ string match -r -- '-.*' -h foo --version bar
# To match things that look like options, we need a `--`
# to tell string its options end there.
-h
--version
>_ string match -r '(\d\d?):(\d\d):(\d\d)' 2:34:56
2:34:56
2
34
56
>_ string match -r '^(\w{2,4})\1$' papa mud murmur
papa
pa
murmur
mur
>_ string match -r -a -n at ratatat
2 2
4 2
6 2
>_ string match -r -i '0x[0-9a-f]{1,8}' 'int magic = 0xBadC0de;'
0xBadC0de
>_ echo $version
3.1.2-1575-ga2ff32d90
>_ string match -rq '(?<major>\d+).(?<minor>\d+).(?<revision>\d+)' -- $version
>_ echo "You are using fish $major!"
You are using fish 3!
>_ string match -raq ' *(?<sentence>[^.!?]+)(?<punctuation>[.!?])?' "hello, friend. goodbye"
>_ printf "%s\n" -- $sentence
hello, friend
goodbye
>_ printf "%s\n" -- $punctuation
.
>_ string match -rq '(?<word>hello)' 'hi'
>_ count $word
0


"pad" subcommand

string pad [-r | --right] [(-c | --char) CHAR] [(-w | --width) INTEGER]

[STRING ...]

string pad extends each STRING to the given visible width by adding CHAR to the left. That means the width of all visible characters added together, excluding escape sequences and accounting for fish_emoji_width and fish_ambiguous_width. It is the amount of columns in a terminal the STRING occupies.

The escape sequences reflect what fish knows about, and how it computes its output. Your terminal might support more escapes, or not support escape sequences that fish knows about.

If -r or --right is given, add the padding after a string.

If -c or --char is given, pad with CHAR instead of whitespace.

The output is padded to the maximum width of all input strings. If -w or --width is given, use at least that.

Examples

>_ string pad -w 10 abc abcdef

abc
abcdef >_ string pad --right --char=🐟 "fish are pretty" "rich. " fish are pretty rich. 🐟🐟🐟🐟 >_ string pad -w$COLUMNS (date) # Prints the current time on the right edge of the screen.


See also

  • The printf command can do simple padding, for example printf %10s\n works like string pad -w10.
  • string length with the --visible option can be used to show what fish thinks the width is.

"shorten" subcommand

string shorten [(-c | --char) CHARS] [(-m | --max) INTEGER]

[-N | --no-newline] [-l | --left] [-q | --quiet] [STRING ...]

string shorten truncates each STRING to the given visible width and adds an ellipsis to indicate it. "Visible width" means the width of all visible characters added together, excluding escape sequences and accounting for fish_emoji_width and fish_ambiguous_width. It is the amount of columns in a terminal the STRING occupies.

The escape sequences reflect what fish knows about, and how it computes its output. Your terminal might support more escapes, or not support escape sequences that fish knows about.

If -m or --max is given, truncate at the given width. Otherwise, the lowest non-zero width of all input strings is used. A max of 0 means no shortening takes place, all STRINGs are printed as-is.

If -N or --no-newline is given, only the first line (or last line with --left) of each STRING is used, and an ellipsis is added if it was multiline. This only works for STRINGs being given as arguments, multiple lines given on stdin will be interpreted as separate STRINGs instead.

If -c or --char is given, add CHAR instead of an ellipsis. This can also be empty or more than one character.

If -l or --left is given, remove text from the left on instead, so this prints the longest suffix of the string that fits. With --no-newline, this will take from the last line instead of the first.

If -q or --quiet is given, string shorten only runs for the return value - if anything would be shortened, it returns 0, else 1.

The default ellipsis is . If fish thinks your system is incapable because of your locale, it will use ... instead.

The return value is 0 if any shortening occured, 1 otherwise.

Examples

>_ string shorten foo foobar
# No width was given, we infer, and "foo" is the shortest.
foo
fo…
>_ string shorten --char="..." foo foobar
# The target width is 3 because of "foo",
# and our ellipsis is 3 too, so we can't really show anything.
# This is the default ellipsis if your locale doesn't allow "…".
foo
...
>_ string shorten --char="" --max 4 abcdef 123456
# Leaving the char empty makes us not add an ellipsis
# So this truncates at 4 columns:
abcd
1234
>_ touch "a multiline"\n"file"
>_ for file in *; string shorten -N -- $file; end
# Shorten the multiline file so we only show one line per file:
a multiline…
>_ ss -p | string shorten -m$COLUMNS -c ""
# `ss` from Linux' iproute2 shows socket information, but prints extremely long lines.
# This shortens input so it fits on the screen without overflowing lines.
>_ git branch | string match -rg '^\* (.*)' | string shorten -m20
# Take the current git branch and shorten it at 20 columns.
# Here the branch is "builtin-path-with-expand"
builtin-path-with-e…
>_ git branch | string match -rg '^\* (.*)' | string shorten -m20 --left
# Taking 20 columns from the right instead:
…in-path-with-expand


See also

  • string's pad subcommand does the inverse of this command, adding padding to a specific width instead.
  • The printf command can do simple padding, for example printf %10s\n works like string pad -w10.
  • string length with the --visible option can be used to show what fish thinks the width is.

"repeat" subcommand

string repeat [(-n | --count) COUNT] [(-m | --max) MAX] [-N | --no-newline]

[-q | --quiet] [STRING ...] string repeat [-N | --no-newline] [-q | --quiet] COUNT [STRING ...]

string repeat repeats the STRING -n or --count times. The -m or --max option will limit the number of outputted characters (excluding the newline). This option can be used by itself or in conjunction with --count. If both --count and --max are present, max char will be outputed unless the final repeated string size is less than max, in that case, the string will repeat until count has been reached. Both --count and --max will accept a number greater than or equal to zero, in the case of zero, nothing will be outputed. The first argument is interpreted as COUNT if --count or --max are not explicilty specified. If -N or --no-newline is given, the output won't contain a newline character at the end. Exit status: 0 if yielded string is not empty, 1 otherwise.

Examples

Repeat Examples

>_ string repeat -n 2 'foo '
foo foo
>_ echo foo | string repeat -n 2
foofoo
>_ string repeat -n 2 -m 5 'foo'
foofo
>_ string repeat -m 5 'foo'
foofo
>_ string repeat 2 'foo'
foofoo
>_ string repeat 2 -n 3
222


"replace" subcommand

string replace [-a | --all] [-f | --filter] [-i | --ignore-case]

[-r | --regex] [(-m | --max-matches) MAX] [-q | --quiet]
PATTERN REPLACEMENT [STRING ...]

string replace is similar to string match but replaces non-overlapping matching substrings with a replacement string and prints the result. By default, PATTERN is treated as a literal substring to be matched.

If -r or --regex is given, PATTERN is interpreted as a Perl-compatible regular expression, and REPLACEMENT can contain C-style escape sequences like t as well as references to capturing groups by number or name as $n or ${n}.

If you specify the -f or --filter flag then each input string is printed only if a replacement was done. This is useful where you would otherwise use this idiom: a_cmd | string match pattern | string replace pattern new_pattern. You can instead just write a_cmd | string replace --filter pattern new_pattern.

If --max-matches MAX or -m MAX is used, string replace will stop all processing after MAX lines of input have matched the specified pattern. In the event of --filter or -f, this means the output will be MAX lines in length. This can be used as an "early exit" optimization when processing long inputs but expecting a limited and fixed number of outputs that might be found considerably before the input stream has been exhausted.

Exit status: 0 if at least one replacement was performed, or 1 otherwise.

Replace Literal Examples

>_ string replace is was 'blue is my favorite'
blue was my favorite
>_ string replace 3rd last 1st 2nd 3rd
1st
2nd
last
>_ string replace -a ' ' _ 'spaces to underscores'
spaces_to_underscores


Replace Regex Examples

>_ string replace -r -a '[^\d.]+' ' ' '0 one two 3.14 four 5x'
0 3.14 5
>_ string replace -r '(\w+)\s+(\w+)' '$2 $1 $$' 'left right'
right left $
>_ string replace -r '\s*newline\s*' '\n' 'put a newline here'
put a
here


"split" and "split0" subcommands

string split [(-f | --fields) FIELDS] [(-m | --max) MAX] [-n | --no-empty]

[-q | --quiet] [-r | --right] SEP [STRING ...] string split0 [(-f | --fields) FIELDS] [(-m | --max) MAX] [-n | --no-empty]
[-q | --quiet] [-r | --right] [STRING ...]

string split splits each STRING on the separator SEP, which can be an empty string. If -m or --max is specified, at most MAX splits are done on each STRING. If -r or --right is given, splitting is performed right-to-left. This is useful in combination with -m or --max. With -n or --no-empty, empty results are excluded from consideration (e.g. hello\n\nworld would expand to two strings and not three). Exit status: 0 if at least one split was performed, or 1 otherwise.

Use -f or --fields to print out specific fields. FIELDS is a comma-separated string of field numbers and/or spans. Each field is one-indexed, and will be printed on separate lines. If a given field does not exist, then the command exits with status 1 and does not print anything, unless --allow-empty is used.

See also the --delimiter option of the read command.

string split0 splits each STRING on the zero byte (NUL). Options are the same as string split except that no separator is given.

split0 has the important property that its output is not further split when used in a command substitution, allowing for the command substitution to produce elements containing newlines. This is most useful when used with Unix tools that produce zero bytes, such as find -print0 or sort -z. See split0 examples below.

Examples

>_ string split . example.com
example
com
>_ string split -r -m1 / /usr/local/bin/fish
/usr/local/bin
fish
>_ string split '' abc
a
b
c
>_ string split --allow-empty -f1,3-4,5 '' abcd
a
c
d


NUL Delimited Examples

>_ # Count files in a directory, without being confused by newlines.
>_ count (find . -print0 | string split0)
42
>_ # Sort a list of elements which may contain newlines
>_ set foo beta alpha\ngamma
>_ set foo (string join0 $foo | sort -z | string split0)
>_ string escape $foo[1]
alpha\ngamma


"sub" subcommand

string sub [(-s | --start) START] [(-e | --end) END] [(-l | --length) LENGTH]

[-q | --quiet] [STRING ...]

string sub prints a substring of each string argument. The start/end of the substring can be specified with -s/-e or --start/--end followed by a 1-based index value. Positive index values are relative to the start of the string and negative index values are relative to the end of the string. The default start value is 1. The length of the substring can be specified with -l or --length. If the length or end is not specified, the substring continues to the end of each STRING. Exit status: 0 if at least one substring operation was performed, 1 otherwise. --length is mutually exclusive with --end.

Examples

>_ string sub --length 2 abcde
ab
>_ string sub -s 2 -l 2 abcde
bc
>_ string sub --start=-2 abcde
de
>_ string sub --end=3 abcde
abc
>_ string sub -e -1 abcde
abcd
>_ string sub -s 2 -e -1 abcde
bcd
>_ string sub -s -3 -e -2 abcde
c


"trim" subcommand

string trim [-l | --left] [-r | --right] [(-c | --chars) CHARS]

[-q | --quiet] [STRING ...]

string trim removes leading and trailing whitespace from each STRING. If -l or --left is given, only leading whitespace is removed. If -r or --right is given, only trailing whitespace is trimmed.

The -c or --chars switch causes the set of characters in CHARS to be removed instead of whitespace. This is a set of characters, not a string - if you pass -c foo, it will remove any "f" or "o", not just "foo" as a whole.

Exit status: 0 if at least one character was trimmed, or 1 otherwise.

Examples

>_ string trim ' abc  '
abc
>_ string trim --right --chars=yz xyzzy zany
x
zan


"upper" subcommand

string upper [-q | --quiet] [STRING ...]

string upper converts each string argument to uppercase. Exit status: 0 if at least one string was converted to uppercase, else 1. This means that in conjunction with the -q flag you can readily test whether a string is already uppercase.

Regular Expressions

Both the match and replace subcommand support regular expressions when used with the -r or --regex option. The dialect is that of PCRE2.

In general, special characters are special by default, so a+ matches one or more "a"s, while a\+ matches an "a" and then a "+". (a+) matches one or more "a"s in a capturing group ((?:XXXX) denotes a non-capturing group). For the replacement parameter of replace, $n refers to the n-th group of the match. In the match parameter, \n (e.g. \1) refers back to groups.

Some features include repetitions:

  • * refers to 0 or more repetitions of the previous expression
  • + 1 or more
  • ? 0 or 1.
  • {n} to exactly n (where n is a number)
  • {n,m} at least n, no more than m.
  • {n,} n or more

Character classes, some of the more important:

  • . any character except newline
  • \d a decimal digit and \D, not a decimal digit
  • \s whitespace and \S, not whitespace
  • \w a "word" character and \W, a "non-word" character
  • [...] (where "..." is some characters) is a character set
  • [^...] is the inverse of the given character set
  • [x-y] is the range of characters from x-y
  • [[:xxx:]] is a named character set
  • [[:^xxx:]] is the inverse of a named character set
  • [[:alnum:]] : "alphanumeric"
  • [[:alpha:]] : "alphabetic"
  • [[:ascii:]] : "0-127"
  • [[:blank:]] : "space or tab"
  • [[:cntrl:]] : "control character"
  • [[:digit:]] : "decimal digit"
  • [[:graph:]] : "printing, excluding space"
  • [[:lower:]] : "lower case letter"
  • [[:print:]] : "printing, including space"
  • [[:punct:]] : "printing, excluding alphanumeric"
  • [[:space:]] : "white space"
  • [[:upper:]] : "upper case letter"
  • [[:word:]] : "same as w"
  • [[:xdigit:]] : "hexadecimal digit"

Groups:

  • (...) is a capturing group
  • (?:...) is a non-capturing group
  • \n is a backreference (where n is the number of the group, starting with 1)
  • $n is a reference from the replacement expression to a group in the match expression.

And some other things:

  • \b denotes a word boundary, \B is not a word boundary.
  • ^ is the start of the string or line, $ the end.
  • | is "alternation", i.e. the "or".

Comparison to other tools

Most operations string supports can also be done by external tools. Some of these include grep, sed and cut.

If you are familiar with these, it is useful to know how string differs from them.

In contrast to these classics, string reads input either from stdin or as arguments. string also does not deal with files, so it requires redirections to be used with them.

In contrast to grep, string's match defaults to glob-mode, while replace defaults to literal matching. If set to regex-mode, they use PCRE regular expressions, which is comparable to grep's -P option. match defaults to printing just the match, which is like grep with -o (use --entire to enable grep-like behavior).

Like sed's s/old/new/ command, string replace still prints strings that don't match. sed's -n in combination with a /p modifier or command is like string replace -f.

string split somedelimiter is a replacement for tr somedelimiter \n.

string-collect - join strings into one

Synopsis

string collect [-a | --allow-empty] [-N | --no-trim-newlines] [STRING ...]

Description

string collect collects its input into a single output argument, without splitting the output when used in a command substitution. This is useful when trying to collect multiline output from another command into a variable. Exit status: 0 if any output argument is non-empty, or 1 otherwise.

A command like echo (cmd | string collect) is mostly equivalent to a quoted command substitution (echo "$(cmd)"). The main difference is that the former evaluates to zero or one elements whereas the quoted command substitution always evaluates to one element due to string interpolation.

If invoked with multiple arguments instead of input, string collect preserves each argument separately, where the number of output arguments is equal to the number of arguments given to string collect.

Any trailing newlines on the input are trimmed, just as with "$(cmd)" substitution. Use --no-trim-newlines to disable this behavior, which may be useful when running a command such as set contents (cat filename | string collect -N).

With --allow-empty, string collect always prints one (empty) argument. This can be used to prevent an argument from disappearing.

Examples

>_ echo "zero $(echo one\ntwo\nthree) four"
zero one
two
three four
>_ echo \"(echo one\ntwo\nthree | string collect)\"
"one
two
three"
>_ echo \"(echo one\ntwo\nthree | string collect -N)\"
"one
two
three
"
>_ echo foo(true | string collect --allow-empty)bar
foobar


string-escape - escape special characters

Synopsis

string escape [-n | --no-quoted] [--style=] [STRING ...]
string unescape [--style=] [STRING ...]

Description

string escape escapes each STRING in one of three ways. The first is --style=script. This is the default. It alters the string such that it can be passed back to eval to produce the original argument again. By default, all special characters are escaped, and quotes are used to simplify the output when possible. If -n or --no-quoted is given, the simplifying quoted format is not used. Exit status: 0 if at least one string was escaped, or 1 otherwise.

--style=var ensures the string can be used as a variable name by hex encoding any non-alphanumeric characters. The string is first converted to UTF-8 before being encoded.

--style=url ensures the string can be used as a URL by hex encoding any character which is not legal in a URL. The string is first converted to UTF-8 before being encoded.

--style=regex escapes an input string for literal matching within a regex expression. The string is first converted to UTF-8 before being encoded.

string unescape performs the inverse of the string escape command. If the string to be unescaped is not properly formatted it is ignored. For example, doing string unescape --style=var (string escape --style=var $str) will return the original string. There is no support for unescaping --style=regex.

Examples

>_ echo \x07 | string escape
\cg
>_ string escape --style=var 'a1 b2'\u6161
a1_20_b2_E6_85_A1_


string-join - join strings with delimiter

Synopsis

string join [-q | --quiet] SEP [STRING ...]
string join0 [-q | --quiet] [STRING ...]

Description

string join joins its STRING arguments into a single string separated by SEP, which can be an empty string. Exit status: 0 if at least one join was performed, or 1 otherwise. If -n or --no-empty is specified, empty strings are excluded from consideration (e.g. string join -n + a b "" c would expand to a+b+c not a+b++c).

string join0 joins its STRING arguments into a single string separated by the zero byte (NUL), and adds a trailing NUL. This is most useful in conjunction with tools that accept NUL-delimited input, such as sort -z. Exit status: 0 if at least one join was performed, or 1 otherwise.

Because Unix uses NUL as the string terminator, passing the output of string join0 as an argument to a command (via a command substitution) won't actually work. Fish will pass the correct bytes along, but the command won't be able to tell where the argument ends. This is a limitation of Unix' argument passing.

Examples

>_ seq 3 | string join ...
1...2...3
# Give a list of NUL-separated filenames to du (this is a GNU extension)
>_ string join0 file1 file2 file\nwith\nmultiple\nlines | du --files0-from=-
# Just put the strings together without a separator
>_ string join '' a b c
abc


string-join0 - join strings with zero bytes

Synopsis

string join [-q | --quiet] SEP [STRING ...]
string join0 [-q | --quiet] [STRING ...]

Description

string join joins its STRING arguments into a single string separated by SEP, which can be an empty string. Exit status: 0 if at least one join was performed, or 1 otherwise. If -n or --no-empty is specified, empty strings are excluded from consideration (e.g. string join -n + a b "" c would expand to a+b+c not a+b++c).

string join0 joins its STRING arguments into a single string separated by the zero byte (NUL), and adds a trailing NUL. This is most useful in conjunction with tools that accept NUL-delimited input, such as sort -z. Exit status: 0 if at least one join was performed, or 1 otherwise.

Because Unix uses NUL as the string terminator, passing the output of string join0 as an argument to a command (via a command substitution) won't actually work. Fish will pass the correct bytes along, but the command won't be able to tell where the argument ends. This is a limitation of Unix' argument passing.

Examples

>_ seq 3 | string join ...
1...2...3
# Give a list of NUL-separated filenames to du (this is a GNU extension)
>_ string join0 file1 file2 file\nwith\nmultiple\nlines | du --files0-from=-
# Just put the strings together without a separator
>_ string join '' a b c
abc


string-length - print string lengths

Synopsis

string length [-q | --quiet] [-V | --visible] [STRING ...]

Description

string length reports the length of each string argument in characters. Exit status: 0 if at least one non-empty STRING was given, or 1 otherwise.

With -V or --visible, it uses the visible width of the arguments. That means it will discount escape sequences fish knows about, account for $fish_emoji_width and $fish_ambiguous_width. It will also count each line (separated by \n) on its own, and with a carriage return (\r) count only the widest stretch on a line. The intent is to measure the number of columns the STRING would occupy in the current terminal.

Examples

>_ string length 'hello, world'
12
>_ set str foo
>_ string length -q $str; echo $status
0
# Equivalent to test -n "$str"
>_ string length --visible (set_color red)foobar
# the set_color is discounted, so this is the width of "foobar"
6
>_ string length --visible 🐟🐟🐟🐟
# depending on $fish_emoji_width, this is either 4 or 8
# in new terminals it should be
8
>_ string length --visible abcdef\r123
# this displays as "123def", so the width is 6
6
>_ string length --visible a\nbc
# counts "a" and "bc" as separate lines, so it prints width for each
1
2


string-lower - convert strings to lowercase

Synopsis

string lower [-q | --quiet] [STRING ...]

Description

string lower converts each string argument to lowercase. Exit status: 0 if at least one string was converted to lowercase, else 1. This means that in conjunction with the -q flag you can readily test whether a string is already lowercase.

string-match - match substrings

Synopsis

string match [-a | --all] [-e | --entire] [-i | --ignore-case]

[-g | --groups-only] [-r | --regex] [-n | --index]
[-q | --quiet] [-v | --invert] [(-m | --max-matches) MAX]
PATTERN [STRING ...]

Description

string match tests each STRING against PATTERN and prints matching substrings. Only the first match for each STRING is reported unless -a or --all is given, in which case all matches are reported.

If you specify the -e or --entire then each matching string is printed including any prefix or suffix not matched by the pattern (equivalent to grep without the -o flag). You can, obviously, achieve the same result by prepending and appending * or .* depending on whether or not you have specified the --regex flag. The --entire flag is simply a way to avoid having to complicate the pattern in that fashion and make the intent of the string match clearer. Without --entire and --regex, a PATTERN will need to match the entire STRING before it will be reported.

Matching can be made case-insensitive with --ignore-case or -i.

If --groups-only or -g is given, only the capturing groups will be reported - meaning the full match will be skipped. This is incompatible with --entire and --invert, and requires --regex. It is useful as a simple cutting tool instead of string replace, so you can simply choose "this part" of a string.

If --index or -n is given, each match is reported as a 1-based start position and a length. By default, PATTERN is interpreted as a glob pattern matched against each entire STRING argument. A glob pattern is only considered a valid match if it matches the entire STRING.

If --regex or -r is given, PATTERN is interpreted as a Perl-compatible regular expression, which does not have to match the entire STRING. For a regular expression containing capturing groups, multiple items will be reported for each match, one for the entire match and one for each capturing group. With this, only the matching part of the STRING will be reported, unless --entire is given.

When matching via regular expressions, string match automatically sets variables for all named capturing groups ((?<name>expression)). It will create a variable with the name of the group, in the default scope, for each named capturing group, and set it to the value of the capturing group in the first matched argument. If a named capture group matched an empty string, the variable will be set to the empty string (like set var ""). If it did not match, the variable will be set to nothing (like set var). When --regex is used with --all, this behavior changes. Each named variable will contain a list of matches, with the first match contained in the first element, the second match in the second, and so on. If the group was empty or did not match, the corresponding element will be an empty string.

If --invert or -v is used the selected lines will be only those which do not match the given glob pattern or regular expression.

If --max-matches MAX or -m MAX is used, string will stop checking for matches after MAX lines of input have matched. This can be used as an "early exit" optimization when processing long inputs but expecting a limited and fixed number of outputs that might be found considerably before the input stream has been exhausted. If combined with --invert or -v, considers only inverted matches.

Exit status: 0 if at least one match was found, or 1 otherwise.

Examples

Match Glob Examples

>_ string match '?' a
a
>_ string match 'a*b' axxb
axxb
>_ string match -i 'a??B' Axxb
Axxb
>_ string match -- '-*' -h foo --version bar
# To match things that look like options, we need a `--`
# to tell string its options end there.
-h
--version
>_ echo 'ok?' | string match '*\?'
ok?
# Note that only the second STRING will match here.
>_ string match 'foo' 'foo1' 'foo' 'foo2'
foo
>_ string match -e 'foo' 'foo1' 'foo' 'foo2'
foo1
foo
foo2
>_ string match 'foo?' 'foo1' 'foo' 'foo2'
foo1
foo2


Match Regex Examples

>_ string match -r 'cat|dog|fish' 'nice dog'
dog
>_ string match -r -v "c.*[12]" {cat,dog}(seq 1 4)
dog1
dog2
cat3
dog3
cat4
dog4
>_ string match -r -- '-.*' -h foo --version bar
# To match things that look like options, we need a `--`
# to tell string its options end there.
-h
--version
>_ string match -r '(\d\d?):(\d\d):(\d\d)' 2:34:56
2:34:56
2
34
56
>_ string match -r '^(\w{2,4})\1$' papa mud murmur
papa
pa
murmur
mur
>_ string match -r -a -n at ratatat
2 2
4 2
6 2
>_ string match -r -i '0x[0-9a-f]{1,8}' 'int magic = 0xBadC0de;'
0xBadC0de
>_ echo $version
3.1.2-1575-ga2ff32d90
>_ string match -rq '(?<major>\d+).(?<minor>\d+).(?<revision>\d+)' -- $version
>_ echo "You are using fish $major!"
You are using fish 3!
>_ string match -raq ' *(?<sentence>[^.!?]+)(?<punctuation>[.!?])?' "hello, friend. goodbye"
>_ printf "%s\n" -- $sentence
hello, friend
goodbye
>_ printf "%s\n" -- $punctuation
.
>_ string match -rq '(?<word>hello)' 'hi'
>_ count $word
0


string-pad - pad strings to a fixed width

Synopsis

string pad [-r | --right] [(-c | --char) CHAR] [(-w | --width) INTEGER]

[STRING ...]

Description

string pad extends each STRING to the given visible width by adding CHAR to the left. That means the width of all visible characters added together, excluding escape sequences and accounting for fish_emoji_width and fish_ambiguous_width. It is the amount of columns in a terminal the STRING occupies.

The escape sequences reflect what fish knows about, and how it computes its output. Your terminal might support more escapes, or not support escape sequences that fish knows about.

If -r or --right is given, add the padding after a string.

If -c or --char is given, pad with CHAR instead of whitespace.

The output is padded to the maximum width of all input strings. If -w or --width is given, use at least that.

Examples

>_ string pad -w 10 abc abcdef

abc
abcdef >_ string pad --right --char=🐟 "fish are pretty" "rich. " fish are pretty rich. 🐟🐟🐟🐟 >_ string pad -w$COLUMNS (date) # Prints the current time on the right edge of the screen.


See Also

  • The printf command can do simple padding, for example printf %10s\n works like string pad -w10.
  • string length with the --visible option can be used to show what fish thinks the width is.

string-repeat - multiply a string

Synopsis

string repeat [(-n | --count) COUNT] [(-m | --max) MAX] [-N | --no-newline]

[-q | --quiet] [STRING ...] string repeat [-N | --no-newline] [-q | --quiet] COUNT [STRING ...]

Description

string repeat repeats the STRING -n or --count times. The -m or --max option will limit the number of outputted characters (excluding the newline). This option can be used by itself or in conjunction with --count. If both --count and --max are present, max char will be outputed unless the final repeated string size is less than max, in that case, the string will repeat until count has been reached. Both --count and --max will accept a number greater than or equal to zero, in the case of zero, nothing will be outputed. The first argument is interpreted as COUNT if --count or --max are not explicilty specified. If -N or --no-newline is given, the output won't contain a newline character at the end. Exit status: 0 if yielded string is not empty, 1 otherwise.

Examples

Repeat Examples

>_ string repeat -n 2 'foo '
foo foo
>_ echo foo | string repeat -n 2
foofoo
>_ string repeat -n 2 -m 5 'foo'
foofo
>_ string repeat -m 5 'foo'
foofo
>_ string repeat 2 'foo'
foofoo
>_ string repeat 2 -n 3
222


string-replace - replace substrings

Synopsis

string replace [-a | --all] [-f | --filter] [-i | --ignore-case]

[-r | --regex] [(-m | --max-matches) MAX] [-q | --quiet]
PATTERN REPLACEMENT [STRING ...]

Description

string replace is similar to string match but replaces non-overlapping matching substrings with a replacement string and prints the result. By default, PATTERN is treated as a literal substring to be matched.

If -r or --regex is given, PATTERN is interpreted as a Perl-compatible regular expression, and REPLACEMENT can contain C-style escape sequences like t as well as references to capturing groups by number or name as $n or ${n}.

If you specify the -f or --filter flag then each input string is printed only if a replacement was done. This is useful where you would otherwise use this idiom: a_cmd | string match pattern | string replace pattern new_pattern. You can instead just write a_cmd | string replace --filter pattern new_pattern.

If --max-matches MAX or -m MAX is used, string replace will stop all processing after MAX lines of input have matched the specified pattern. In the event of --filter or -f, this means the output will be MAX lines in length. This can be used as an "early exit" optimization when processing long inputs but expecting a limited and fixed number of outputs that might be found considerably before the input stream has been exhausted.

Exit status: 0 if at least one replacement was performed, or 1 otherwise.

Examples

Replace Literal Examples

>_ string replace is was 'blue is my favorite'
blue was my favorite
>_ string replace 3rd last 1st 2nd 3rd
1st
2nd
last
>_ string replace -a ' ' _ 'spaces to underscores'
spaces_to_underscores


Replace Regex Examples

>_ string replace -r -a '[^\d.]+' ' ' '0 one two 3.14 four 5x'
0 3.14 5
>_ string replace -r '(\w+)\s+(\w+)' '$2 $1 $$' 'left right'
right left $
>_ string replace -r '\s*newline\s*' '\n' 'put a newline here'
put a
here


string-shorten - shorten strings to a width, with an ellipsis

Synopsis

string shorten [(-c | --char) CHARS] [(-m | --max) INTEGER]

[-N | --no-newline] [-l | --left] [-q | --quiet] [STRING ...]

Description

string shorten truncates each STRING to the given visible width and adds an ellipsis to indicate it. "Visible width" means the width of all visible characters added together, excluding escape sequences and accounting for fish_emoji_width and fish_ambiguous_width. It is the amount of columns in a terminal the STRING occupies.

The escape sequences reflect what fish knows about, and how it computes its output. Your terminal might support more escapes, or not support escape sequences that fish knows about.

If -m or --max is given, truncate at the given width. Otherwise, the lowest non-zero width of all input strings is used. A max of 0 means no shortening takes place, all STRINGs are printed as-is.

If -N or --no-newline is given, only the first line (or last line with --left) of each STRING is used, and an ellipsis is added if it was multiline. This only works for STRINGs being given as arguments, multiple lines given on stdin will be interpreted as separate STRINGs instead.

If -c or --char is given, add CHAR instead of an ellipsis. This can also be empty or more than one character.

If -l or --left is given, remove text from the left on instead, so this prints the longest suffix of the string that fits. With --no-newline, this will take from the last line instead of the first.

If -q or --quiet is given, string shorten only runs for the return value - if anything would be shortened, it returns 0, else 1.

The default ellipsis is . If fish thinks your system is incapable because of your locale, it will use ... instead.

The return value is 0 if any shortening occured, 1 otherwise.

Examples

>_ string shorten foo foobar
# No width was given, we infer, and "foo" is the shortest.
foo
fo…
>_ string shorten --char="..." foo foobar
# The target width is 3 because of "foo",
# and our ellipsis is 3 too, so we can't really show anything.
# This is the default ellipsis if your locale doesn't allow "…".
foo
...
>_ string shorten --char="" --max 4 abcdef 123456
# Leaving the char empty makes us not add an ellipsis
# So this truncates at 4 columns:
abcd
1234
>_ touch "a multiline"\n"file"
>_ for file in *; string shorten -N -- $file; end
# Shorten the multiline file so we only show one line per file:
a multiline…
>_ ss -p | string shorten -m$COLUMNS -c ""
# `ss` from Linux' iproute2 shows socket information, but prints extremely long lines.
# This shortens input so it fits on the screen without overflowing lines.
>_ git branch | string match -rg '^\* (.*)' | string shorten -m20
# Take the current git branch and shorten it at 20 columns.
# Here the branch is "builtin-path-with-expand"
builtin-path-with-e…
>_ git branch | string match -rg '^\* (.*)' | string shorten -m20 --left
# Taking 20 columns from the right instead:
…in-path-with-expand


See Also

  • string's pad subcommand does the inverse of this command, adding padding to a specific width instead.
  • The printf command can do simple padding, for example printf %10s\n works like string pad -w10.
  • string length with the --visible option can be used to show what fish thinks the width is.

string-split - split strings by delimiter

Synopsis

string split [(-f | --fields) FIELDS] [(-m | --max) MAX] [-n | --no-empty]

[-q | --quiet] [-r | --right] SEP [STRING ...] string split0 [(-f | --fields) FIELDS] [(-m | --max) MAX] [-n | --no-empty]
[-q | --quiet] [-r | --right] [STRING ...]

Description

string split splits each STRING on the separator SEP, which can be an empty string. If -m or --max is specified, at most MAX splits are done on each STRING. If -r or --right is given, splitting is performed right-to-left. This is useful in combination with -m or --max. With -n or --no-empty, empty results are excluded from consideration (e.g. hello\n\nworld would expand to two strings and not three). Exit status: 0 if at least one split was performed, or 1 otherwise.

Use -f or --fields to print out specific fields. FIELDS is a comma-separated string of field numbers and/or spans. Each field is one-indexed, and will be printed on separate lines. If a given field does not exist, then the command exits with status 1 and does not print anything, unless --allow-empty is used.

See also the --delimiter option of the read command.

string split0 splits each STRING on the zero byte (NUL). Options are the same as string split except that no separator is given.

split0 has the important property that its output is not further split when used in a command substitution, allowing for the command substitution to produce elements containing newlines. This is most useful when used with Unix tools that produce zero bytes, such as find -print0 or sort -z. See split0 examples below.

Examples

>_ string split . example.com
example
com
>_ string split -r -m1 / /usr/local/bin/fish
/usr/local/bin
fish
>_ string split '' abc
a
b
c
>_ string split --allow-empty -f1,3-4,5 '' abcd
a
c
d


NUL Delimited Examples

>_ # Count files in a directory, without being confused by newlines.
>_ count (find . -print0 | string split0)
42
>_ # Sort a list of elements which may contain newlines
>_ set foo beta alpha\ngamma
>_ set foo (string join0 $foo | sort -z | string split0)
>_ string escape $foo[1]
alpha\ngamma


string-split0 - split on zero bytes

Synopsis

string split [(-f | --fields) FIELDS] [(-m | --max) MAX] [-n | --no-empty]

[-q | --quiet] [-r | --right] SEP [STRING ...] string split0 [(-f | --fields) FIELDS] [(-m | --max) MAX] [-n | --no-empty]
[-q | --quiet] [-r | --right] [STRING ...]

Description

string split splits each STRING on the separator SEP, which can be an empty string. If -m or --max is specified, at most MAX splits are done on each STRING. If -r or --right is given, splitting is performed right-to-left. This is useful in combination with -m or --max. With -n or --no-empty, empty results are excluded from consideration (e.g. hello\n\nworld would expand to two strings and not three). Exit status: 0 if at least one split was performed, or 1 otherwise.

Use -f or --fields to print out specific fields. FIELDS is a comma-separated string of field numbers and/or spans. Each field is one-indexed, and will be printed on separate lines. If a given field does not exist, then the command exits with status 1 and does not print anything, unless --allow-empty is used.

See also the --delimiter option of the read command.

string split0 splits each STRING on the zero byte (NUL). Options are the same as string split except that no separator is given.

split0 has the important property that its output is not further split when used in a command substitution, allowing for the command substitution to produce elements containing newlines. This is most useful when used with Unix tools that produce zero bytes, such as find -print0 or sort -z. See split0 examples below.

Examples

>_ string split . example.com
example
com
>_ string split -r -m1 / /usr/local/bin/fish
/usr/local/bin
fish
>_ string split '' abc
a
b
c
>_ string split --allow-empty -f1,3-4,5 '' abcd
a
c
d


NUL Delimited Examples

>_ # Count files in a directory, without being confused by newlines.
>_ count (find . -print0 | string split0)
42
>_ # Sort a list of elements which may contain newlines
>_ set foo beta alpha\ngamma
>_ set foo (string join0 $foo | sort -z | string split0)
>_ string escape $foo[1]
alpha\ngamma


string-sub - extract substrings

Synopsis

string sub [(-s | --start) START] [(-e | --end) END] [(-l | --length) LENGTH]

[-q | --quiet] [STRING ...]

Description

string sub prints a substring of each string argument. The start/end of the substring can be specified with -s/-e or --start/--end followed by a 1-based index value. Positive index values are relative to the start of the string and negative index values are relative to the end of the string. The default start value is 1. The length of the substring can be specified with -l or --length. If the length or end is not specified, the substring continues to the end of each STRING. Exit status: 0 if at least one substring operation was performed, 1 otherwise. --length is mutually exclusive with --end.

Examples

>_ string sub --length 2 abcde
ab
>_ string sub -s 2 -l 2 abcde
bc
>_ string sub --start=-2 abcde
de
>_ string sub --end=3 abcde
abc
>_ string sub -e -1 abcde
abcd
>_ string sub -s 2 -e -1 abcde
bcd
>_ string sub -s -3 -e -2 abcde
c


string-trim - remove trailing whitespace

Synopsis

string trim [-l | --left] [-r | --right] [(-c | --chars) CHARS]

[-q | --quiet] [STRING ...]

Description

string trim removes leading and trailing whitespace from each STRING. If -l or --left is given, only leading whitespace is removed. If -r or --right is given, only trailing whitespace is trimmed.

The -c or --chars switch causes the set of characters in CHARS to be removed instead of whitespace. This is a set of characters, not a string - if you pass -c foo, it will remove any "f" or "o", not just "foo" as a whole.

Exit status: 0 if at least one character was trimmed, or 1 otherwise.

Examples

>_ string trim ' abc  '
abc
>_ string trim --right --chars=yz xyzzy zany
x
zan


string-unescape - expand escape sequences

Synopsis

string escape [-n | --no-quoted] [--style=] [STRING ...]
string unescape [--style=] [STRING ...]

Description

string escape escapes each STRING in one of three ways. The first is --style=script. This is the default. It alters the string such that it can be passed back to eval to produce the original argument again. By default, all special characters are escaped, and quotes are used to simplify the output when possible. If -n or --no-quoted is given, the simplifying quoted format is not used. Exit status: 0 if at least one string was escaped, or 1 otherwise.

--style=var ensures the string can be used as a variable name by hex encoding any non-alphanumeric characters. The string is first converted to UTF-8 before being encoded.

--style=url ensures the string can be used as a URL by hex encoding any character which is not legal in a URL. The string is first converted to UTF-8 before being encoded.

--style=regex escapes an input string for literal matching within a regex expression. The string is first converted to UTF-8 before being encoded.

string unescape performs the inverse of the string escape command. If the string to be unescaped is not properly formatted it is ignored. For example, doing string unescape --style=var (string escape --style=var $str) will return the original string. There is no support for unescaping --style=regex.

Examples

>_ echo \x07 | string escape
\cg
>_ string escape --style=var 'a1 b2'\u6161
a1_20_b2_E6_85_A1_


string-upper - convert strings to uppercase

Synopsis

string upper [-q | --quiet] [STRING ...]

Description

string upper converts each string argument to uppercase. Exit status: 0 if at least one string was converted to uppercase, else 1. This means that in conjunction with the -q flag you can readily test whether a string is already uppercase.

suspend - suspend the current shell

Synopsis

suspend [--force]

Description

suspend suspends execution of the current shell by sending it a SIGTSTP signal, returning to the controlling process. It can be resumed later by sending it a SIGCONT. In order to prevent suspending a shell that doesn't have a controlling process, it will not suspend the shell if it is a login shell. This requirement is bypassed if the --force option is given or the shell is not interactive.

switch - conditionally execute a block of commands

Synopsis

switch VALUE; [case [GLOB ...]; [COMMANDS ...]; ...] end

Description

switch performs one of several blocks of commands, depending on whether a specified value equals one of several globbed values. case is used together with the switch statement in order to determine which block should be executed.

Each case command is given one or more parameters. The first case command with a parameter that matches the string specified in the switch command will be evaluated. case parameters may contain globs. These need to be escaped or quoted in order to avoid regular glob expansion using filenames.

Note that fish does not fall through on case statements. Only the first matching case is executed.

Note that break cannot be used to exit a case/switch block early like in other languages. It can only be used in loops.

Note that command substitutions in a case statement will be evaluated even if its body is not taken. All substitutions, including command substitutions, must be performed before the value can be compared against the parameter.

Example

If the variable $animal contains the name of an animal, the following code would attempt to classify it:

switch $animal

case cat
echo evil
case wolf dog human moose dolphin whale
echo mammal
case duck goose albatross
echo bird
case shark trout stingray
echo fish
case '*'
echo I have no idea what a $animal is end


If the above code was run with $animal set to whale, the output would be mammal.

test - perform tests on files and text

Synopsis

test [EXPRESSION]
[ [EXPRESSION] ]

Description

NOTE: This page documents the fish builtin test. To see the documentation on any non-fish versions, use command man test.

test checks the given conditions and sets the exit status to 0 if they are true, 1 if they are false.

The first form (test) is preferred. For compatibility with other shells, the second form is available: a matching pair of square brackets ([ [EXPRESSION] ]).

When using a variable or command substitution as an argument with test you should almost always enclose it in double-quotes, as variables expanding to zero or more than one argument will most likely interact badly with test.

WARNING:

For historical reasons, test supports the one-argument form (test foo), and this will also be triggered by e.g. test -n $foo if $foo is unset. We recommend you don't use the one-argument form and quote all variables or command substitutions used with test.

This confusing misfeature will be removed in future. test -n without any additional argument will be false, test -z will be true and any other invocation with exactly one or zero arguments, including test -d and test "foo" will be an error.

The same goes for [, e.g. [ "foo" ] and [ -d ] will be errors.

This can be turned on already via the test-require-arg feature flag, and will eventually become the default and then only option.



Operators for files and directories

Returns true if FILE is a block device.
Returns true if FILE is a character device.
Returns true if FILE is a directory.
Returns true if FILE exists.
Returns true if FILE is a regular file.
Returns true if FILE has the set-group-ID bit set.
Returns true if FILE exists and has the same group ID as the current user.
Returns true if FILE has the sticky bit set. If the OS does not support the concept it returns false. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sticky_bit.
Returns true if FILE is a symbolic link.
Returns true if FILE exists and is owned by the current user.
Returns true if FILE is a named pipe.
Returns true if FILE is marked as readable.
Returns true if the size of FILE is greater than zero.
Returns true if FILE is a socket.
Returns true if the file descriptor FD is a terminal (TTY).
Returns true if FILE has the set-user-ID bit set.
Returns true if FILE is marked as writable; note that this does not check if the filesystem is read-only.
Returns true if FILE is marked as executable.

Operators to compare files and directories

Returns true if FILE1 is newer than FILE2, or FILE1 exists and FILE2 does not.
Returns true if FILE1 is older than FILE2, or FILE2 exists and FILE1 does not.
Returns true if FILE1 and FILE2 refer to the same file.

Operators for text strings

Returns true if the strings STRING1 and STRING2 are identical.
Returns true if the strings STRING1 and STRING2 are not identical.
Returns true if the length of STRING is non-zero.
Returns true if the length of STRING is zero.

Operators to compare and examine numbers

Returns true if NUM1 and NUM2 are numerically equal.
Returns true if NUM1 and NUM2 are not numerically equal.
Returns true if NUM1 is greater than NUM2.
Returns true if NUM1 is greater than or equal to NUM2.
Returns true if NUM1 is less than NUM2.
Returns true if NUM1 is less than or equal to NUM2.

Both integers and floating point numbers are supported.

Operators to combine expressions

Returns true if both COND1 and COND2 are true.
Returns true if either COND1 or COND2 are true.

Expressions can be inverted using the ! operator:

! EXPRESSION
Returns true if EXPRESSION is false, and false if EXPRESSION is true.

Expressions can be grouped using parentheses.

( EXPRESSION )
Returns the value of EXPRESSION.

Note that parentheses will usually require escaping with \ (so they appear as \( and \)) to avoid being interpreted as a command substitution.

Examples

If the /tmp directory exists, copy the /etc/motd file to it:

if test -d /tmp

cp /etc/motd /tmp/motd end


If the variable MANPATH is defined and not empty, print the contents. (If MANPATH is not defined, then it will expand to zero arguments, unless quoted.)

if test -n "$MANPATH"

echo $MANPATH end


Be careful with unquoted variables:

if test -n $MANPATH

# This will also be reached if $MANPATH is unset,
# because in that case we have `test -n`, so it checks if "-n" is non-empty, and it is.
echo $MANPATH end


This will change in a future release of fish, or already with the test-require-arg feature flag - if $MANPATH is unset, if test -n $MANPATH will be false.

Parentheses and the -o and -a operators can be combined to produce more complicated expressions. In this example, success is printed if there is a /foo or /bar file as well as a /baz or /bat file.

if test \( -f /foo -o -f /bar \) -a \( -f /baz -o -f /bat \)

echo Success. end


Numerical comparisons will simply fail if one of the operands is not a number:

if test 42 -eq "The answer to life, the universe and everything"

echo So long and thanks for all the fish # will not be executed end


A common comparison is with status:

if test $status -eq 0

echo "Previous command succeeded" end


The previous test can likewise be inverted:

if test ! $status -eq 0

echo "Previous command failed" end


which is logically equivalent to the following:

if test $status -ne 0

echo "Previous command failed" end


Standards

Unlike many things in fish, test implements a subset of the IEEE Std 1003.1-2008 (POSIX.1) standard <https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/test.html>. The following exceptions apply:

  • The < and > operators for comparing strings are not implemented.
  • With test-require-arg, the zero- and one-argument modes will behave differently.

In cases such as this, one can use command test to explicitly use the system's standalone test rather than this builtin test.


See also

Other commands that may be useful as a condition, and are often easier to use:

  • string - manipulate strings, which can do string operations including wildcard and regular expression matching
  • path - manipulate and check paths, which can do file checks and operations, including filters on multiple paths at once

time - measure how long a command or block takes

Synopsis

time COMMAND

Description

NOTE: This page documents the fish keyword time. To see the documentation on any non-fish versions, use command man time.

time causes fish to measure how long a command takes and print the results afterwards. The command can be a simple fish command or a block. The results can not currently be redirected.

For checking timing after a command has completed, check $CMD_DURATION.

Your system most likely also has a time command. To use that use something like command time, as in command time sleep 10. Because it's not inside fish, it won't have access to fish functions and won't be able to time blocks and such.

How to interpret the output

Time outputs a few different values. Let's look at an example:

> time string repeat -n 10000000 y\n | command grep y >/dev/null
________________________________________________________
Executed in  805.98 millis    fish           external

usr time 798.88 millis 763.88 millis 34.99 millis
sys time 141.22 millis 40.20 millis 101.02 millis


The time after "Executed in" is what is known as the "wall-clock time". It is simply a measure of how long it took from the start of the command until it finished. Typically it is reasonably close to CMD_DURATION, except for a slight skew because the two are taken at slightly different times.

The other times are all measures of CPU time. That means they measure how long the CPU was used in this part, and they count multiple cores separately. So a program with four threads using all CPU for a second will have a time of 4 seconds.

The "usr" time is how much CPU time was spent inside the program itself, the "sys" time is how long was spent in the kernel on behalf of that program.

The "fish" time is how much CPU was spent in fish, the "external" time how much was spent in external commands.

So in this example, since string is a builtin, everything that string repeat did is accounted to fish. Any time it spends doing syscalls like write() is accounted for in the fish/sys time.

And grep here is explicitly invoked as an external command, so its times will be counted in the "external" column.

Note that, as in this example, the CPU times can add up to more than the execution time. This is because things can be done in parallel - grep can match while string repeat writes.

Example

(for obvious reasons exact results will vary on your system)

>_ time sleep 1s
________________________________________________________
Executed in    1,01 secs   fish           external

usr time 2,32 millis 0,00 micros 2,32 millis
sys time 0,88 millis 877,00 micros 0,00 millis >_ time for i in 1 2 3; sleep 1s; end ________________________________________________________ Executed in 3,01 secs fish external
usr time 9,16 millis 2,94 millis 6,23 millis
sys time 0,23 millis 0,00 millis 0,23 millis


Inline variable assignments need to follow the time keyword:

>_ time a_moment=1.5m sleep $a_moment
________________________________________________________
Executed in   90.00 secs      fish           external

usr time 4.62 millis 4.62 millis 0.00 millis
sys time 2.35 millis 0.41 millis 1.95 millis


trap - perform an action when the shell receives a signal

Synopsis

trap [OPTIONS] [[ARG] REASON ... ]

Description

NOTE: This page documents the fish builtin trap. To see the documentation on any non-fish versions, use command man trap.

trap is a wrapper around the fish event delivery framework. It exists for backwards compatibility with POSIX shells. For other uses, it is recommended to define an event handler.

The following parameters are available:

Command to be executed on signal delivery.
Name of the event to trap. For example, a signal like INT or SIGINT, or the special symbol EXIT.
Prints a list of signal names.
Prints all defined signal handlers.
Displays help about using this command.

If ARG and REASON are both specified, ARG is the command to be executed when the event specified by REASON occurs (e.g., the signal is delivered).

If ARG is absent (and there is a single REASON) or -, each specified signal is reset to its original disposition (the value it had upon entrance to the shell). If ARG is the null string the signal specified by each REASON is ignored by the shell and by the commands it invokes.

If ARG is not present and -p has been supplied, then the trap commands associated with each REASON are displayed. If no arguments are supplied or if only -p is given, trap prints the list of commands associated with each signal.

Signal names are case insensitive and the SIG prefix is optional. Trapping a signal will prevent fish from exiting in response to that signal.

The exit status is 1 if any REASON is invalid; otherwise trap returns 0.

Example

trap "status --print-stack-trace" SIGUSR1
# Prints a stack trace each time the SIGUSR1 signal is sent to the shell.


true - return a successful result

Synopsis

true

Description

true sets the exit status to 0.

: (a single colon) is an alias for the true command.

See Also

  • false command
  • $status variable

type - locate a command and describe its type

Synopsis

type [OPTIONS] NAME [...]

Description

NOTE: This page documents the fish builtin type. To see the documentation on any non-fish versions, use command man type.

With no options, type indicates how each NAME would be interpreted if used as a command name.

The following options are available:

Prints all of possible definitions of the specified names.
Don't print function definitions when used with no options or with -a/--all.
Suppresses function lookup.
Prints function, builtin, or file if NAME is a shell function, builtin, or disk file, respectively.
Prints the path to NAME if NAME resolves to an executable file in PATH, the path to the script containing the definition of the function NAME if NAME resolves to a function loaded from a file on disk (i.e. not interactively defined at the prompt), or nothing otherwise.
Returns the path to the executable file NAME, presuming NAME is found in the PATH environment variable, or nothing otherwise. --force-path explicitly resolves only the path to executable files in PATH, regardless of whether NAME is shadowed by a function or builtin with the same name.
Suppresses all output; this is useful when testing the exit status. For compatibility with old fish versions this is also --quiet.
Displays help about using this command.

The -q, -p, -t and -P flags (and their long flag aliases) are mutually exclusive. Only one can be specified at a time.

type returns 0 if at least one entry was found, 1 otherwise, and 2 for invalid options or option combinations.

Example

>_ type fg
fg is a builtin


ulimit - set or get resource usage limits

Synopsis

ulimit [OPTIONS] [LIMIT]

Description

ulimit sets or outputs the resource usage limits of the shell and any processes spawned by it. If a new limit value is omitted, the current value of the limit of the resource is printed; otherwise, the specified limit is set to the new value.

Use one of the following switches to specify which resource limit to set or report:

The maximum size of socket buffers.
The maximum size of core files created. By setting this limit to zero, core dumps can be disabled.
The maximum size of a process' data segment.
Controls the maximum nice value; on Linux, this value is subtracted from 20 to give the effective value.
The maximum size of files created by a process.
The maximum number of signals that may be queued.
The maximum size that may be locked into memory.
The maximum resident set size.
The maximum number of open file descriptors.
The maximum size of data in POSIX message queues.
The maximum realtime scheduling priority.
The maximum stack size.
The maximum amount of CPU time in seconds.
The maximum number of processes available to the current user.
The maximum swap space available to the current user.
The maximum amount of virtual memory available to the shell.
The maximum contiguous realtime CPU time in microseconds.
The maximum number of kqueues (kernel queues) for the current user.
The maximum number of pseudo-terminals for the current user.
The maximum number of simultaneous threads for the current user.

Note that not all these limits are available in all operating systems; consult the documentation for setrlimit in your operating system.

The value of limit can be a number in the unit specified for the resource or one of the special values hard, soft, or unlimited, which stand for the current hard limit, the current soft limit, and no limit, respectively.

If limit is given, it is the new value of the specified resource. If no option is given, then -f is assumed. Values are in kilobytes, except for -t, which is in seconds and -n and -u, which are unscaled values. The exit status is 0 unless an invalid option or argument is supplied, or an error occurs while setting a new limit.

ulimit also accepts the following options that determine what type of limit to set:

Sets hard resource limit.
Sets soft resource limit.

A hard limit can only be decreased. Once it is set it cannot be increased; a soft limit may be increased up to the value of the hard limit. If neither -H nor -S is specified, both the soft and hard limits are updated when assigning a new limit value, and the soft limit is used when reporting the current value.

The following additional options are also understood by ulimit:

Prints all current limits.
Displays help about using this command.

The fish implementation of ulimit should behave identically to the implementation in bash, except for these differences:

  • Fish ulimit supports GNU-style long options for all switches.
  • Fish ulimit does not support the -p option for getting the pipe size. The bash implementation consists of a compile-time check that empirically guesses this number by writing to a pipe and waiting for SIGPIPE. Fish does not do this because this method of determining pipe size is unreliable. Depending on bash version, there may also be further additional limits to set in bash that do not exist in fish.
  • Fish ulimit does not support getting or setting multiple limits in one command, except reporting all values using the -a switch.

Example

ulimit -Hs 64 sets the hard stack size limit to 64 kB.

umask - set or get the file creation mode mask

Synopsis

umask [OPTIONS] [MASK]

Description

NOTE: This page documents the fish builtin umask. To see the documentation on any non-fish versions, use command man umask.

umask displays and manipulates the "umask", or file creation mode mask, which is used to restrict the default access to files.

The umask may be expressed either as an octal number, which represents the rights that will be removed by default, or symbolically, which represents the only rights that will be granted by default.

Access rights are explained in the manual page for the chmod(1) program.

With no parameters, the current file creation mode mask is printed as an octal number.

Prints the umask in symbolic form instead of octal form.
Outputs the umask in a form that may be reused as input.
Displays help about using this command.

If a numeric mask is specified as a parameter, the current shell's umask will be set to that value, and the rights specified by that mask will be removed from new files and directories by default.

If a symbolic mask is specified, the desired permission bits, and not the inverse, should be specified. A symbolic mask is a comma separated list of rights. Each right consists of three parts:

  • The first part specifies to whom this set of right applies, and can be one of u, g, o or a, where u specifies the user who owns the file, g specifies the group owner of the file, o specific other users rights and a specifies all three should be changed.
  • The second part of a right specifies the mode, and can be one of =, + or -, where = specifies that the rights should be set to the new value, + specifies that the specified right should be added to those previously specified and - specifies that the specified rights should be removed from those previously specified.
  • The third part of a right specifies what rights should be changed and can be any combination of r, w and x, representing read, write and execute rights.

If the first and second parts are skipped, they are assumed to be a and =, respectively. As an example, r,u+w means all users should have read access and the file owner should also have write access.

Note that symbolic masks currently do not work as intended.

Example

umask 177 or umask u=rw sets the file creation mask to read and write for the owner and no permissions at all for any other users.

vared - interactively edit the value of an environment variable

Synopsis

vared VARIABLE_NAME

Description

vared is used to interactively edit the value of an environment variable. Array variables as a whole can not be edited using vared, but individual list elements can.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Example

vared PATH[3] edits the third element of the PATH list

wait - wait for jobs to complete

Synopsis

wait [-n | --any] [PID | PROCESS_NAME] ...

Description

NOTE: This page documents the fish builtin wait. To see the documentation on any non-fish versions, use command man wait.

wait waits for child jobs to complete.

If a PID is specified, the command waits for the job that the process with that process ID belongs to.

If a PROCESS_NAME is specified, the command waits for the jobs that the matched processes belong to.

If neither a pid nor a process name is specified, the command waits for all background jobs.

If the -n or --any flag is provided, the command returns as soon as the first job completes. If it is not provided, it returns after all jobs complete.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Example

sleep 10 &
wait $last_pid


spawns sleep in the background, and then waits until it finishes.

for i in (seq 1 5); sleep 10 &; end
wait


spawns five jobs in the background, and then waits until all of them finish.

for i in (seq 1 5); sleep 10 &; end
hoge &
wait sleep


spawns five sleep jobs and hoge in the background, and then waits until all sleeps finish, and doesn't wait for hoge.

while - perform a set of commands multiple times

Synopsis

while CONDITION; COMMANDS; end

Description

while repeatedly executes CONDITION, and if the exit status is 0, then executes COMMANDS.

The exit status of the while loop is the exit status of the last iteration of the COMMANDS executed, or 0 if none were executed. (This matches other shells and is POSIX-compatible.)

You can use and or or for complex conditions. Even more complex control can be achieved with while true containing a break.

The -h or --help option displays help about using this command.

Example

while test -f foo.txt; or test -f bar.txt ; echo file exists; sleep 10; end
# outputs 'file exists' at 10 second intervals,
# as long as the file foo.txt or bar.txt exists.


Fish for bash users

This is to give you a quick overview if you come from bash (or to a lesser extent other shells like zsh or ksh) and want to know how fish differs. Fish is intentionally not POSIX-compatible and as such some of the things you are used to work differently.

Many things are similar - they both fundamentally expand commandlines to execute commands, have pipes, redirections, variables, globs, use command output in various ways. This document is there to quickly show you the differences.

Command substitutions

Fish spells command substitutions as $(command) or (command), but not `command`.

In addition, it only splits them on newlines instead of $IFS. If you want to split on something else, use string split, string split0 or string collect. If those are used as the last command in a command substitution the splits they create are carried over. So:

for i in (find . -print0 | string split0)


will correctly handle all possible filenames.

Variables

Fish sets and erases variables with set instead of VAR=VAL and a variety of separate builtins like declare and unset and export. set takes options to determine the scope and exportedness of a variable:

# Define $PAGER *g*lobal and e*x*ported,
# so this is like ``export PAGER=less``
set -gx PAGER less
# Define $alocalvariable only locally,
# like ``local alocalvariable=foo``
set -l alocalvariable foo


or to erase variables:

set -e PAGER


VAR=VAL statements are available as environment overrides:

PAGER=cat git log


Fish does not perform word splitting. Once a variable has been set to a value, that value stays as it is, so double-quoting variable expansions isn't the necessity it is in bash. [1]

For instance, here's bash

> foo="bar baz"
> printf '"%s"\n' $foo
# will print two lines, because we didn't double-quote
# this is word splitting
"bar"
"baz"


And here is fish:

> set foo "bar baz"
> printf '"%s"\n' $foo
# foo was set as one element,
# so it will be passed as one element, so this is one line
"bar baz"


All variables are "arrays" (we use the term "lists"), and expanding a variable expands to all its elements, with each element as its own argument (like bash's "${var[@]}":

> set var "foo bar" banana
> printf %s\n $var
foo bar
banana


Specific elements of a list can be selected:

echo $list[5..7]


The arguments to set are ordinary, so you can also set a variable to the output of a command:

# Set lines to all the lines in file, one element per line
set lines (cat file)


or a mixture of literal values and output:

> set numbers 1 2 3 (seq 5 8) 9
> printf '%s\n' $numbers
1
2
3
5
6
7
8
9


A = is unnecessary and unhelpful with set - set foo = bar will set the variable "foo" to two values: "=" and "bar". set foo=bar will print an error.

See Shell variables for more.

[1]
zsh also does not perform word splitting by default (the SH_WORD_SPLIT option controls this)

Wildcards (globs)

Fish only supports the * and ** glob (and the deprecated ? glob) as syntax. If a glob doesn't match it fails the command (like with bash's failglob) unless the command is for, set or count or the glob is used with an environment override (VAR=* command), in which case it expands to nothing (like with bash's nullglob option).

Globbing doesn't happen on expanded variables, so:

set foo "*"
echo $foo


will not match any files.

There are no options to control globbing so it always behaves like that.

The ** glob will match in subdirectories as well. In other shells this often needs to be turned on with an option, like setopt globstar in bash.

Unlike bash, fish will also follow symlinks, and will sort the results in a natural sort, with included numbers compared as numbers. That means it will sort e.g. music tracks correctly even if they have numbers like 1 instead of 01.

See Wildcards for more.

Quoting

Fish has two quoting styles: "" and ''. Variables are expanded in double-quotes, nothing is expanded in single-quotes.

There is no $'', instead the sequences that would transform are transformed when unquoted:

> echo a\nb
a
b


See Quotes for more.

String manipulation

Fish does not have ${foo%bar}, ${foo#bar} and ${foo/bar/baz}. Instead string manipulation is done by the string builtin.

For example, to replace "bar" with "baz":

> string replace bar baz "bar luhrmann"
baz luhrmann


It can also split strings:

> string split "," "foo,bar"
foo
bar


Match regular expressions as a replacement for grep:

> echo bababa | string match -r 'aba$'
aba


Pad strings to a given width, with arbitrary characters:

> string pad -c x -w 20 "foo"
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxfoo


Make strings lower/uppercase:

> string lower Foo
foo
> string upper Foo
FOO


repeat strings, trim strings, escape strings or print a string's length or width (in terminal cells).

Special variables

Some bash variables and their closest fish equivalent:

  • $*, $@, $1 and so on: $argv
  • $?: $status
  • $$: $fish_pid
  • $#: No variable, instead use count $argv
  • $!: $last_pid
  • $0: status filename
  • $-: Mostly status is-interactive and status is-login

Process substitution

Instead of <(command) fish uses (command | psub). There is no equivalent to >(command).

Note that both of these are bashisms, and most things can easily be expressed without. E.g. instead of:

source (command | psub)


just use:

command | source


as fish's source can read from stdin.

Heredocs

Fish does not have <<EOF "heredocs". Instead of

cat <<EOF
some string
some more string
EOF


use:

printf %s\n "some string" "some more string"


or:

echo "some string
some more string"
# or if you want the quotes on separate lines:
echo "\
some string
some more string\
"


Quotes are followed across newlines.

What "heredocs" do is:

1.
Read/interpret the string, with special rules, up to the terminator. [2]
2.
Write the resulting string to a temporary file.
3.
Start the command the heredoc is attached to with that file as stdin.

This means it is essentially the same as just reading from a pipe, so:

echo "foo" | cat


is mostly the same as

cat <<EOF
foo
EOF


Just like with heredocs, the command has to be prepared to read from stdin. Sometimes this requires special options to be used, often giving a filename of - turns it on.

For example:

echo "xterm
rxvt-unicode" | pacman --remove -
# is the same as (the `-` makes pacman read arguments from stdin)
pacman --remove xterm rxvt-unicode


and could be written in other shells as

# This "-" is still necessary - the heredoc is *also* passed over stdin!
pacman --remove - << EOF
xterm
rxvt-unicode
EOF


So heredocs really are just minor syntactical sugar that introduces a lot of special rules, which is why fish doesn't have them. Pipes are a core concept, and are simpler and compose nicer.

[2]
For example, the "EOF" is just a convention, the terminator can be an arbitrary string, something like "THISISTHEEND" also works. And using <<- trims leading tab characters (but not other whitespace), so you can indent the lines, but only with tabs. Substitutions (variables, commands) are done on the heredoc by default, but not if the terminator is quoted: cat << "EOF".

Test (test, [, [[)

Fish has a POSIX-compatible test or [ builtin. There is no [[ and test does not accept == as a synonym for =. It can compare floating point numbers, however.

set -q can be used to determine if a variable exists or has a certain number of elements (set -q foo[2]).

Arithmetic Expansion

Fish does not have $((i+1)) arithmetic expansion, computation is handled by math:

math $i + 1


Unlike bash's arithmetic, it can handle floating point numbers:

> math 5 / 2
2.5


And also has some functions, like for trigonometry:

> math cos 2 x pi
1


You can pass arguments to math separately like above or in quotes. Because fish uses () parentheses for command substitutions, quoting is needed if you want to use them in your expression:

> math '(5 + 2) * 4'


Both * and x are valid ways to spell multiplication, but * needs to be quoted because it looks like a glob.

Prompts

Fish does not use the $PS1, $PS2 and so on variables. Instead the prompt is the output of the fish_prompt function, plus the fish_mode_prompt function if vi mode is enabled. The output of the fish_right_prompt function is used for the right-sided prompt.

As an example, here's a relatively simple bash prompt:

# <$HOSTNAME> <$PWD in blue> <Prompt Sign in Yellow> <Rest in default light white>
PS1='\h\[\e[1;34m\]\w\[\e[m\] \[\e[1;32m\]\$\[\e[m\] '


and a rough fish equivalent:

function fish_prompt

set -l prompt_symbol '$'
fish_is_root_user; and set prompt_symbol '#'
echo -s (prompt_hostname) \
(set_color blue) (prompt_pwd) \
(set_color yellow) $prompt_symbol (set_color normal) end


This shows a few differences:

  • Fish provides set_color to color text. It can use the 16 named colors and also RGB sequences (so you could also use set_color 5555FF)
  • Instead of introducing specific escapes like \h for the hostname, the prompt is simply a function. To achieve the effect of \h, fish provides helper functions like prompt_hostname, which prints a shortened version of the hostname.
  • Fish offers other helper functions for adding things to the prompt, like fish_vcs_prompt for adding a display for common version control systems (git, mercurial, svn), and prompt_pwd for showing a shortened $PWD (the user's home directory becomes ~ and any path component is shortened).

The default prompt is reasonably full-featured and its code can be read via type fish_prompt.

Fish does not have $PS2 for continuation lines, instead it leaves the lines indented to show that the commandline isn't complete yet.

Blocks and loops

Fish's blocking constructs look a little different. They all start with a word, end in end and don't have a second starting word:

for i in 1 2 3; do

echo $i done # becomes for i in 1 2 3
echo $i end while true; do
echo Weeee done # becomes while true
echo Weeeeeee end {
echo Hello } # becomes begin
echo Hello end if true; then
echo Yes I am true else
echo "How is true not true?" fi # becomes if true
echo Yes I am true else
echo "How is true not true?" end foo() {
echo foo } # becomes function foo
echo foo end # (bash allows the word "function", # but this is an extension)


Fish does not have an until. Use while not or while !.

Subshells

Bash has a feature called "subshells", where it will start another shell process for certain things. That shell will then be independent and e.g. any changes it makes to variables won't be visible in the main shell.

This includes things like:

# A list of commands in `()` parentheses
(foo; bar) | baz
# Both sides of a pipe
foo | while read -r bar; do

# This will not be visible outside of the loop.
VAR=VAL
# This background process will not be, either
baz & done


Fish does not currently have subshells. You will have to find a different solution. The isolation can usually be achieved by just scoping variables (with set -l), but if you really do need to run your code in a new shell environment you can use fish -c 'your code here' to do so explicitly.

() subshells are often confused with {} grouping, which does not use a subshell. When you just need to group, you can use begin; end in fish:

(foo; bar) | baz
# when it should really have been:
{ foo; bar; } | baz
# becomes
begin; foo; bar; end | baz


The pipe will simply be run in the same process, so while read loops can set variables outside:

foo | while read bar

set -g VAR VAL
baz & end echo $VAR # will print VAL jobs # will show "baz"


Subshells are also frequently confused with command substitutions, which bash writes as `command` or $(command) and fish writes as $(command) or (command). Bash also uses subshells to implement them.

Builtins and other commands

By now it has become apparent that fish puts much more of a focus on its builtins and external commands rather than its syntax. So here are some helpful builtins and their rough equivalent in bash:

  • string - this replaces most of the string transformation (${i%foo} et al) and can also be used instead of grep and sed and such.
  • math - this replaces $((i + 1)) arithmetic and can also do floats and some simple functions (sine and friends).
  • argparse - this can handle a script's option parsing, for which bash would probably use getopt (zsh provides zparseopts).
  • count can be used to count things and therefore replaces $# and can be used instead of wc.
  • status provides information about the shell status, e.g. if it's interactive or what the current linenumber is. This replaces $- and $BASH_LINENO and other variables.
  • seq(1) can be used as a replacement for {1..10} range expansion. If your OS doesn't ship a seq fish includes a replacement function.

Other facilities

Bash has set -x or set -o xtrace to print all commands that are being executed. In fish, this would be enabled by setting fish_trace.

Or, if your intention is to profile how long each line of a script takes, you can use fish --profile - see the page for the fish command.

Tutorial

Why fish?

Fish is a fully-equipped command line shell (like bash or zsh) that is smart and user-friendly. Fish supports powerful features like syntax highlighting, autosuggestions, and tab completions that just work, with nothing to learn or configure.

If you want to make your command line more productive, more useful, and more fun, without learning a bunch of arcane syntax and configuration options, then fish might be just what you're looking for!

Getting started

Once installed, just type in fish into your current shell to try it out!

You will be greeted by the standard fish prompt, which means you are all set up and can start using fish:

> fish
Welcome to fish, the friendly interactive shell
Type help for instructions on how to use fish
you@hostname ~>


This prompt that you see above is the fish default prompt: it shows your username, hostname, and working directory. You can customize it, see how to change your prompt.

From now on, we'll pretend your prompt is just a > to save space.

Learning fish

This tutorial assumes a basic understanding of command line shells and Unix commands, and that you have a working copy of fish.

If you have a strong understanding of other shells, and want to know what fish does differently, search for the magic phrase unlike other shells, which is used to call out important differences.

Or, if you want a quick overview over the differences to other shells like Bash, see Fish For Bash Users.

For the full, detailed description of how to use fish interactively, see Interactive Use.

For a comprehensive description of fish's scripting language, see The Fish Language.

Running Commands

Fish runs commands like other shells: you type a command, followed by its arguments. Spaces are separators:

> echo hello world
hello world


This runs the command echo with the arguments hello and world. In this case that's the same as one argument hello world, but in many cases it's not. If you need to pass an argument that includes a space, you can escape with a backslash, or quote it using single or double quotes:

> mkdir My\ Files
# Makes a directory called "My Files", with a space in the name
> cp ~/Some\ File 'My Files'
# Copies a file called "Some File" in the home directory to "My Files"
> ls "My Files"
Some File


Getting Help

Run help to open fish's help in a web browser, and man with the page (like fish-language) to open it in a man page. You can also ask for help with a specific command, for example, help set to open in a web browser, or man set to see it in the terminal.

> man set
set - handle shell variables

Synopsis...


To open this section, use help getting-help.

This only works for fish's own documentation for itself and its built-in commands (the "builtins"). For any other commands on your system, they should provide their own documentation, often in the man system. For example man ls should tell you about your computer's ls command.

Syntax Highlighting

You'll quickly notice that fish performs syntax highlighting as you type. Invalid commands are colored red by default:

> /bin/mkd


A command may be invalid because it does not exist, or refers to a file that you cannot execute. When the command becomes valid, it is shown in a different color:

> /bin/mkdir


Valid file paths are underlined as you type them:

> cat ~/somefi


This tells you that there exists a file that starts with somefi, which is useful feedback as you type.

These colors, and many more, can be changed by running fish_config, or by modifying color variables directly.

For example, if you want to disable (almost) all coloring:

fish_config theme choose none


This picks the "none" theme. To see all themes:

fish_config theme show


Just running fish_config will open up a browser interface that allows you to pick from the available themes.

Autosuggestions

As you type fish will suggest commands to the right of the cursor, in gray. For example:

> /bin/hostname


It knows about paths and options:

> grep --ignore-case


And history too. Type a command once, and you can re-summon it by just typing a few letters:

> rsync -avze ssh . myname@somelonghost.com:/some/long/path/doo/dee/doo/dee/doo


To accept the autosuggestion, hit right () or ctrl-f. To accept a single word of the autosuggestion, alt-right (). If the autosuggestion is not what you want, just ignore it.

If you don't like autosuggestions, you can disable them by setting $fish_autosuggestion_enabled to 0:

set -g fish_autosuggestion_enabled 0


Tab Completions

A rich set of tab completions work "out of the box".

Press tab and fish will attempt to complete the command, argument, or path:

> /pritab => /private/


If there's more than one possibility, it will list them:

> ~/stuff/stab
~/stuff/script.sh  (command)  ~/stuff/sources/  (directory)


Hit tab again to cycle through the possibilities. The part in parentheses there (that "command" and "directory") is the completion description. It's just a short hint to explain what kind of argument it is.

fish can also complete many commands, like git branches:

> git merge prtab => git merge prompt_designer
> git checkout btab
builtin_list_io_merge (Branch)  builtin_set_color (Branch) busted_events (Tag)


Try hitting tab and see what fish can do!

Variables

Like other shells, a dollar sign followed by a variable name is replaced with the value of that variable:

> echo My home directory is $HOME
My home directory is /home/tutorial


This is known as variable substitution, and it also happens in double quotes, but not single quotes:

> echo "My current directory is $PWD"
My current directory is /home/tutorial
> echo 'My current directory is $PWD'
My current directory is $PWD


Unlike other shells, fish has an ordinary command to set variables: set, which takes a variable name, and then its value.

> set name 'Mister Noodle'
> echo $name
Mister Noodle


(Notice the quotes: without them, Mister and Noodle would have been separate arguments, and $name would have been made into a list of two elements.)

Unlike other shells, variables are not further split after substitution:

> mkdir $name
> ls
Mister Noodle


In bash, this would have created two directories "Mister" and "Noodle". In fish, it created only one: the variable had the value "Mister Noodle", so that is the argument that was passed to mkdir, spaces and all.

You can erase (or "delete") a variable with -e or --erase

> set -e MyVariable
> env | grep MyVariable
(no output)


For more, see Variable expansion.

Exports (Shell Variables)

Sometimes you need to have a variable available to an external command, often as a setting. For example many programs like git or man read the $PAGER variable to figure out your preferred pager (the program that lets you scroll text). Other variables used like this include $BROWSER, $LANG (to configure your language) and $PATH. You'll note these are written in ALLCAPS, but that's just a convention.

To give a variable to an external command, it needs to be "exported". This is done with a flag to set, either --export or just -x.

> set -x MyVariable SomeValue
> env | grep MyVariable
MyVariable=SomeValue


It can also be unexported with --unexport or -u.

This works the other way around as well! If fish is started by something else, it inherits that parents exported variables. So if your terminal emulator starts fish, and it exports $LANG set to en_US.UTF-8, fish will receive that setting. And whatever started your terminal emulator also gave it some variables that it will then pass on unless it specifically decides not to. This is how fish usually receives the values for things like $LANG, $PATH and $TERM, without you having to specify them again.

Exported variables can be local or global or universal - "exported" is not a scope! Usually you'd make them global via set -gx MyVariable SomeValue.

For more, see Exporting variables.

Lists

The set command above used quotes to ensure that Mister Noodle was one argument. If it had been two arguments, then name would have been a list of length 2. In fact, all variables in fish are really lists, that can contain any number of values, or none at all.

Some variables, like $PWD, only have one value. By convention, we talk about that variable's value, but we really mean its first (and only) value.

Other variables, like $PATH, really do have multiple values. During variable expansion, the variable expands to become multiple arguments:

> echo $PATH
/usr/bin /bin /usr/sbin /sbin /usr/local/bin


Variables whose name ends in "PATH" are automatically split on colons to become lists. They are joined using colons when exported to subcommands. This is for compatibility with other tools, which expect $PATH to use colons. You can also explicitly add this quirk to a variable with set --path, or remove it with set --unpath.

Lists cannot contain other lists: there is no recursion. A variable is a list of strings, full stop.

Get the length of a list with count:

> count $PATH
5


You can append (or prepend) to a list by setting the list to itself, with some additional arguments. Here we append /usr/local/bin to $PATH:

> set PATH $PATH /usr/local/bin


You can access individual elements with square brackets. Indexing starts at 1 from the beginning, and -1 from the end:

> echo $PATH
/usr/bin /bin /usr/sbin /sbin /usr/local/bin
> echo $PATH[1]
/usr/bin
> echo $PATH[-1]
/usr/local/bin


You can also access ranges of elements, known as "slices":

> echo $PATH[1..2]
/usr/bin /bin
> echo $PATH[-1..2]
/usr/local/bin /sbin /usr/sbin /bin


You can iterate over a list (or a slice) with a for loop:

for val in $PATH

echo "entry: $val" end # Will print: # entry: /usr/bin/ # entry: /bin # entry: /usr/sbin # entry: /sbin # entry: /usr/local/bin


One particular bit is that you can use lists like Brace expansion. If you attach another string to a list, it'll combine every element of the list with the string:

> set mydirs /usr/bin /bin
> echo $mydirs/fish # this is just like {/usr/bin,/bin}/fish
/usr/bin/fish /bin/fish


This also means that, if the list is empty, there will be no argument:

> set empty # no argument
> echo $empty/this_is_gone # prints an empty line


If you quote the list, it will be used as one string and so you'll get one argument even if it is empty.

For more, see Lists. For more on combining lists with strings (or even other lists), see cartesian products and Variable expansion.

Wildcards

Fish supports the familiar wildcard *. To list all JPEG files:

> ls *.jpg
lena.jpg
meena.jpg
santa maria.jpg


You can include multiple wildcards:

> ls l*.p*
lena.png
lesson.pdf


The recursive wildcard ** searches directories recursively:

> ls /var/**.log
/var/log/system.log
/var/run/sntp.log


If that directory traversal is taking a long time, you can ctrl-c out of it.

For more, see Wildcards.

Pipes and Redirections

You can pipe between commands with the usual vertical bar:

> echo hello world | wc

1 2 12


stdin and stdout can be redirected via the familiar < and >. stderr is redirected with a 2>.

> grep fish < /etc/shells > ~/output.txt 2> ~/errors.txt


To redirect stdout and stderr into one file, you can use &>:

> make &> make_output.txt


For more, see Input and output redirections and Pipes.

Command Substitutions

Command substitutions use the output of one command as an argument to another. Unlike other shells, fish does not use backticks `` for command substitutions. Instead, it uses parentheses with or without a dollar:

> echo In (pwd), running $(uname)
In /home/tutorial, running FreeBSD


A common idiom is to capture the output of a command in a variable:

> set os (uname)
> echo $os
Linux


Command substitutions without a dollar are not expanded within quotes, so the version with a dollar is simpler:

> touch "testing_$(date +%s).txt"
> ls *.txt
testing_1360099791.txt


Unlike other shells, fish does not split command substitutions on any whitespace (like spaces or tabs), only newlines. Usually this is a big help because unix commands operate on a line-by-line basis. Sometimes it can be an issue with commands like pkg-config that print what is meant to be multiple arguments on a single line. To split it on spaces too, use string split.

> printf '%s\n' (pkg-config --libs gio-2.0)
-lgio-2.0 -lgobject-2.0 -lglib-2.0
> printf '%s\n' (pkg-config --libs gio-2.0 | string split -n " ")
-lgio-2.0
-lgobject-2.0
-lglib-2.0


If you need a command substitutions output as one argument, without any splits, use quoted command substitution:

> echo "first line
second line" > myfile
> set myfile "$(cat myfile)"
> printf '|%s|' $myfile
|first line
second line|


For more, see Command substitution.

Separating Commands (Semicolon)

Like other shells, fish allows multiple commands either on separate lines or the same line.

To write them on the same line, use the semicolon (";"). That means the following two examples are equivalent:

echo fish; echo chips
# or
echo fish
echo chips


This is useful interactively to enter multiple commands. In a script it's easier to read if the commands are on separate lines.

Exit Status

When a command exits, it returns a status code as a non-negative integer (that's a whole number >= 0).

Unlike other shells, fish stores the exit status of the last command in $status instead of $?.

> false
> echo $status
1


This indicates how the command fared - 0 usually means success, while the others signify kinds of failure. For instance fish's set --query returns the number of variables it queried that weren't set - set --query PATH usually returns 0, set --query arglbargl boogagoogoo usually returns 2.

There is also a $pipestatus list variable for the exit statuses [1] of processes in a pipe.

For more, see The status variable.

[1]
or "stati" if you prefer, or "statūs" if you've time-travelled from ancient Rome or work as a latin teacher

Combiners (And, Or, Not)

fish supports the familiar && and || to combine commands, and ! to negate them:

> ./configure && make && sudo make install


Here, make is only executed if ./configure succeeds (returns 0), and sudo make install is only executed if both ./configure and make succeed.

fish also supports and, or, and not. The first two are job modifiers and have lower precedence. Example usage:

> cp file1 file1_bak && cp file2 file2_bak; and echo "Backup successful"; or echo "Backup failed"
Backup failed


As mentioned in the section on the semicolon, this can also be written in multiple lines, like so:

cp file1 file1_bak && cp file2 file2_bak
and echo "Backup successful"
or echo "Backup failed"


Conditionals (If, Else, Switch)

Use if and else to conditionally execute code, based on the exit status of a command.

if grep fish /etc/shells

echo Found fish else if grep bash /etc/shells
echo Found bash else
echo Got nothing end


To compare strings or numbers or check file properties (whether a file exists or is writeable and such), use test, like

if test "$fish" = "flounder"

echo FLOUNDER end # or if test "$number" -gt 5
echo $number is greater than five else
echo $number is five or less end # or # This test is true if the path /etc/hosts exists # - it could be a file or directory or symlink (or possibly something else). if test -e /etc/hosts
echo We most likely have a hosts file else
echo We do not have a hosts file end


Combiners can also be used to make more complex conditions, like

if command -sq fish; and grep fish /etc/shells

echo fish is installed and configured end


For even more complex conditions, use begin and end to group parts of them.

There is also a switch command:

switch (uname)
case Linux

echo Hi Tux! case Darwin
echo Hi Hexley! case FreeBSD NetBSD DragonFly
echo Hi Beastie! case '*'
echo Hi, stranger! end


As you see, case does not fall through, and can accept multiple arguments or (quoted) wildcards.

For more, see Conditions.

Functions

A fish function is a list of commands, which may optionally take arguments. Unlike other shells, arguments are not passed in "numbered variables" like $1, but instead in a single list $argv. To create a function, use the function builtin:

function say_hello

echo Hello $argv end say_hello # prints: Hello say_hello everybody! # prints: Hello everybody!


Unlike other shells, fish does not have aliases or special prompt syntax. Functions take their place. [2]

You can list the names of all functions with the functions builtin (note the plural!). fish starts out with a number of functions:

> functions
N_, abbr, alias, bg, cd, cdh, contains_seq, dirh, dirs, disown, down-or-search, edit_command_buffer, export, fg, fish_add_path, fish_breakpoint_prompt, fish_clipboard_copy, fish_clipboard_paste, fish_config, fish_default_key_bindings, fish_default_mode_prompt, fish_git_prompt, fish_hg_prompt, fish_hybrid_key_bindings, fish_indent, fish_is_root_user, fish_job_summary, fish_key_reader, fish_md5, fish_mode_prompt, fish_npm_helper, fish_opt, fish_print_git_action, fish_print_hg_root, fish_prompt, fish_sigtrap_handler, fish_svn_prompt, fish_title, fish_update_completions, fish_vcs_prompt, fish_vi_cursor, fish_vi_key_bindings, funced, funcsave, grep, help, history, hostname, isatty, kill, la, ll, ls, man, nextd, open, popd, prevd, prompt_hostname, prompt_pwd, psub, pushd, realpath, seq, setenv, suspend, trap, type, umask, up-or-search, vared, wait


You can see the source for any function by passing its name to functions:

> functions ls
function ls --description 'List contents of directory'

command ls -G $argv end


For more, see Functions.

[2]
There is a function called alias, but it's just a shortcut to make functions. fish also provides abbreviations, through the abbr command.

Loops

While loops:

while true

echo "Loop forever" end # Prints: # Loop forever # Loop forever # Loop forever # yes, this really will loop forever. Unless you abort it with ctrl-c.


For loops can be used to iterate over a list. For example, a list of files:

for file in *.txt

cp $file $file.bak end


Iterating over a list of numbers can be done with seq:

for x in (seq 5)

touch file_$x.txt end


For more, see Loops and blocks.

Prompt

Unlike other shells, there is no prompt variable like PS1. To display your prompt, fish executes the fish_prompt function and uses its output as the prompt. And if it exists, fish also executes the fish_right_prompt function and uses its output as the right prompt.

You can define your own prompt from the command line:

> function fish_prompt; echo "New Prompt % "; end
New Prompt % _


Then, if you are happy with it, you can save it to disk by typing funcsave fish_prompt. This saves the prompt in ~/.config/fish/functions/fish_prompt.fish. (Or, if you want, you can create that file manually from the start.)

Multiple lines are OK. Colors can be set via set_color, passing it named ANSI colors, or hex RGB values:

function fish_prompt

set_color purple
date "+%m/%d/%y"
set_color F00
echo (pwd) '>' (set_color normal) end


This prompt would look like:

02/06/13
/home/tutorial > _


You can choose among some sample prompts by running fish_config for a web UI or fish_config prompt for a simpler version inside your terminal.

$PATH

$PATH is an environment variable containing the directories that fish searches for commands. Unlike other shells, $PATH is a list, not a colon-delimited string.

Fish takes care to set $PATH to a default, but typically it is just inherited from fish's parent process and is set to a value that makes sense for the system - see Exports.

To prepend /usr/local/bin and /usr/sbin to $PATH, you can write:

> set PATH /usr/local/bin /usr/sbin $PATH


To remove /usr/local/bin from $PATH, you can write:

> set PATH (string match -v /usr/local/bin $PATH)


For compatibility with other shells and external commands, $PATH is a path variable, and so will be joined with colons (not spaces) when you quote it:

> echo "$PATH"
/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin


and it will be exported like that, and when fish starts it splits the $PATH it receives into a list on colon.

You can do so directly in config.fish, like you might do in other shells with .profile. See this example.

A faster way is to use the fish_add_path function, which adds given directories to the path if they aren't already included. It does this by modifying the $fish_user_paths universal variable, which is automatically prepended to $PATH. For example, to permanently add /usr/local/bin to your $PATH, you could write:

> fish_add_path /usr/local/bin


The advantage is that you don't have to go mucking around in files: just run this once at the command line, and it will affect the current session and all future instances too. You can also add this line to config.fish, as it only adds the component if necessary.

Or you can modify $fish_user_paths yourself, but you should be careful not to append to it unconditionally in config.fish, or it will grow longer and longer.

Startup (Where's .bashrc?)

Fish starts by executing commands in ~/.config/fish/config.fish. You can create it if it does not exist.

It is possible to directly create functions and variables in config.fish file, using the commands shown above. For example:

> cat ~/.config/fish/config.fish
set -x PATH $PATH /sbin/
function ll

ls -lh $argv end


However, it is more common and efficient to use autoloading functions and universal variables.

If you want to organize your configuration, fish also reads commands in .fish files in ~/.config/fish/conf.d/. See Configuration Files for the details.

Autoloading Functions

When fish encounters a command, it attempts to autoload a function for that command, by looking for a file with the name of that command in ~/.config/fish/functions/.

For example, if you wanted to have a function ll, you would add a text file ll.fish to ~/.config/fish/functions:

> cat ~/.config/fish/functions/ll.fish
function ll

ls -lh $argv end


This is the preferred way to define your prompt as well:

> cat ~/.config/fish/functions/fish_prompt.fish
function fish_prompt

echo (pwd) "> " end


See the documentation for funced and funcsave for ways to create these files automatically, and $fish_function_path to control their location.

Universal Variables

A universal variable is a variable whose value is shared across all instances of fish, now and in the future – even after a reboot. You can make a variable universal with set -U:

> set -U EDITOR vim


Now in another shell:

> echo $EDITOR
vim


You only need to set universal variables once interactively. There is no need to add them to your config files. For more details, see Universal Variables.

Ready for more?

If you want to learn more about fish, there is lots of detailed documentation, the official gitter channel <https://gitter.im/fish-shell/fish-shell>, an official mailing list <https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/fish-users>, and the github page <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/>.

Writing your own completions

To specify a completion, use the complete command. complete takes as a parameter the name of the command to specify a completion for. For example, to add a completion for the program myprog, start the completion command with complete -c myprog ...

For a complete description of the various switches accepted by the complete command, see the documentation for the complete builtin, or write complete --help inside the fish shell.

To provide a list of possible completions for myprog, use the -a switch. If myprog accepts the arguments start and stop, this can be specified as complete -c myprog -a 'start stop'. The argument to the -a switch is always a single string. At completion time, it will be tokenized on spaces and tabs, and variable expansion, command substitution and other forms of parameter expansion will take place:

# If myprog can list the valid outputs with the list-outputs subcommand:
complete -c myprog -l output -a '(myprog list-outputs)'


fish has a special syntax to support specifying switches accepted by a command. The switches -s, -l and -o are used to specify a short switch (single character, such as -l), a gnu style long switch (such as --color) and an old-style long switch (with one -, like -shuffle), respectively. If the command 'myprog' has an option that can be written as -o or --output, that is:

complete -c myprog -s o -l output


If this option takes an optional argument, you would also add --argument or -a, and give that the possible arguments:

complete -c myprog -s o -l output -a "yes no"


This offers the arguments "yes" and "no" for:

> myprog -o<TAB>
> myprog --output=<TAB>


By default, option arguments are optional, so the candidates are only offered directly attached like that, so they aren't given in this case:

> myprog -o <TAB>


Usually options require a parameter, so you would give --require-parameter / -r:

complete -c myprog -s o -l output -ra "yes no"


which offers yes/no in these cases:

> myprog -o<TAB>
> myprog --output=<TAB>
> myprog -o <TAB>
> myprog --output <TAB>


Fish will also offer files by default, in addition to the arguments you specified. You would either inhibit file completion for a single option:

complete -c myprog -s o -l output --no-files -ra "yes no"


or with a specific condition:

complete -c myprog -f --condition '__fish_seen_subcommand_from somesubcommand'


or you can disable file completions globally for the command:

complete -c myprog -f


If you have disabled them globally, you can enable them just for a specific condition or option with the --force-files / -F option:

# Disable files by default
complete -c myprog -f
# but reenable them for --config-file
complete -c myprog -l config-file --force-files -r


As a more comprehensive example, here's a commented excerpt of the completions for systemd's timedatectl:

# All subcommands that timedatectl knows - this is useful for later.
set -l commands status set-time set-timezone list-timezones set-local-rtc set-ntp
# Disable file completions for the entire command
# because it does not take files anywhere
# Note that this can be undone by using "-F".
#
# File completions also need to be disabled
# if you want to have more control over what files are offered
# (e.g. just directories, or just files ending in ".mp3").
complete -c timedatectl -f
# This line offers the subcommands
# -"status",
# -"set-timezone",
# -"set-time"
# -"list-timezones"
# if no subcommand has been given so far.
#
# The `-n`/`--condition` option takes script as a string, which it executes.
# If it returns true, the completion is offered.
# Here the condition is the `__fish_seen_subcommands_from` helper function.
# It returns true if any of the given commands is used on the commandline,
# as determined by a simple heuristic.
# For more complex uses, you can write your own function.
# See e.g. the git completions for an example.
#
complete -c timedatectl -n "not __fish_seen_subcommand_from $commands" \

-a "status set-time set-timezone list-timezones" # If the "set-timezone" subcommand is used, # offer the output of `timedatectl list-timezones` as completions. # Each line of output is used as a separate candidate, # and anything after a tab is taken as the description. # It's often useful to transform command output with `string` into that form. complete -c timedatectl -n "__fish_seen_subcommand_from set-timezone" \
-a "(timedatectl list-timezones)" # Completion candidates can also be described via `-d`, # which is useful if the description is constant. # Try to keep these short, because that means the user gets to see more at once. complete -c timedatectl -n "not __fish_seen_subcommand_from $commands" \
-a "set-local-rtc" -d "Maintain RTC in local time" # We can also limit options to certain subcommands by using conditions. complete -c timedatectl -n "__fish_seen_subcommand_from set-local-rtc" \
-l adjust-system-clock -d 'Synchronize system clock from the RTC' # These are simple options that can be used everywhere. complete -c timedatectl -s h -l help -d 'Print a short help text and exit' complete -c timedatectl -l version -d 'Print a short version string and exit' complete -c timedatectl -l no-pager -d 'Do not pipe output into a pager'


For examples of how to write your own complex completions, study the completions in /usr/share/fish/completions. (The exact path depends on your chosen installation prefix and may be slightly different)

Useful functions for writing completions

fish ships with several functions that may be useful when writing command-specific completions. Most of these function names begin with the string __fish_. Such functions are internal to fish and their name and interface may change in future fish versions. A few of these functions are described here.

Functions beginning with the string __fish_print_ print a newline separated list of strings. For example, __fish_print_filesystems prints a list of all known file systems. Functions beginning with __fish_complete_ print out a newline separated list of completions with descriptions. The description is separated from the completion by a tab character.

  • __fish_complete_directories STRING DESCRIPTION performs path completion on STRING, allowing only directories, and giving them the description DESCRIPTION.
  • __fish_complete_path STRING DESCRIPTION performs path completion on STRING, giving them the description DESCRIPTION.
  • __fish_complete_groups prints a list of all user groups with the groups members as description.
  • __fish_complete_pids prints a list of all processes IDs with the command name as description.
  • __fish_complete_suffix SUFFIX performs file completion but sorts files ending in SUFFIX first. This is useful in conjunction with complete --keep-order.
  • __fish_complete_users prints a list of all users with their full name as description.
  • __fish_print_filesystems prints a list of all known file systems. Currently, this is a static list, and not dependent on what file systems the host operating system actually understands.
  • __fish_print_hostnames prints a list of all known hostnames. This function searches the fstab for nfs servers, ssh for known hosts and checks the /etc/hosts file.
  • __fish_print_interfaces prints a list of all known network interfaces.

Where to put completions

Completions can be defined on the commandline or in a configuration file, but they can also be automatically loaded. Fish automatically searches through any directories in the list variable $fish_complete_path, and any completions defined are automatically loaded when needed. A completion file must have a filename consisting of the name of the command to complete and the suffix .fish.

By default, Fish searches the following for completions, using the first available file that it finds:

  • A directory for end-users to keep their own completions, usually ~/.config/fish/completions (controlled by the XDG_CONFIG_HOME environment variable);
  • A directory for systems administrators to install completions for all users on the system, usually /etc/fish/completions;
  • A user-specified directory for third-party vendor completions, usually ~/.local/share/fish/vendor_completions.d (controlled by the XDG_DATA_HOME environment variable);
  • A directory for third-party software vendors to ship their own completions for their software, usually /usr/share/fish/vendor_completions.d;
  • The completions shipped with fish, usually installed in /usr/share/fish/completions; and
  • Completions automatically generated from the operating system's manual, usually stored in ~/.cache/fish/generated_completions (controlled by XDG_CACHE_HOME environment variable).

These paths are controlled by parameters set at build, install, or run time, and may vary from the defaults listed above.

This wide search may be confusing. If you are unsure, your completions probably belong in ~/.config/fish/completions.

If you have written new completions for a common Unix command, please consider sharing your work by submitting it via the instructions in Further help and development.

If you are developing another program and would like to ship completions with your program, install them to the "vendor" completions directory. As this path may vary from system to system, the pkgconfig framework should be used to discover this path with the output of pkg-config --variable completionsdir fish.

Writing your own prompt

WARNING:

This document uses formatting to show what a prompt would look like. If you are viewing this in the man page, you probably want to switch to looking at the html version instead. Run help custom-prompt to view it in a web browser.


Fish ships a number of prompts that you can view with the fish_config command, and many users have shared their prompts online.

However, you can also write your own, or adjust an existing prompt. This is a good way to get used to fish's scripting language.

Unlike other shells, fish's prompt is built by running a function - fish_prompt. Or, more specifically, three functions:

  • fish_prompt, which is the main prompt function
  • fish_right_prompt, which is shown on the right side of the terminal.
  • fish_mode_prompt, which is shown if vi mode is used.

These functions are run, and whatever they print is displayed as the prompt (minus one trailing newline).

Here, we will just be writing a simple fish_prompt.

Our first prompt

Let's look at a very simple example:

function fish_prompt

echo $PWD '>' end


This prints the current working directory (PWD) and a > symbol to show where the prompt ends. The > is quoted because otherwise it would signify a redirection.

Because we've used echo, it adds spaces between the two so it ends up looking like (assuming _ is your cursor):

/home/tutorial >_


Formatting

echo adds spaces between its arguments. If you don't want those, you can use string join like this:

function fish_prompt

string join '' -- $PWD '>' end


The -- indicates to string that no options can come after it, in case we extend this with something that can start with a -.

There are other ways to remove the space, including echo -s and printf.

Adding color

This prompt is functional, but a bit boring. We could add some color.

Fortunately, fish offers the set_color command, so you can do:

echo (set_color red)foo


set_color can also handle RGB colors like set_color 23b455, and other formatting options including bold and italics.

So, taking our previous prompt and adding some color:

function fish_prompt

string join '' -- (set_color green) $PWD (set_color normal) '>' end


A "normal" color tells the terminal to go back to its normal formatting options.

set_color works by producing an escape sequence, which is a special piece of text that terminals interpret as instructions - for example, to change color. So set_color red produces the same effect as:

echo \e\[31m


Although you can write your own escape sequences by hand, it's much easier to use set_color.

Shortening the working directory

This is fine, but our PWD can be a bit long, and we are typically only interested in the last few directories. We can shorten this with the prompt_pwd helper that will give us a shortened working directory:

function fish_prompt

string join '' -- (set_color green) (prompt_pwd) (set_color normal) '>' end


prompt_pwd takes options to control how much to shorten. For instance, if we want to display the last two directories, we'd use prompt_pwd --full-length-dirs 2:

function fish_prompt

string join '' -- (set_color green) (prompt_pwd --full-length-dirs 2) (set_color normal) '>' end


With a current directory of "/home/tutorial/Music/Lena Raine/Oneknowing", this would print

~/M/Lena Raine/Oneknowing>_


Status

One important bit of information that every command returns is the status. This is a whole number from 0 to 255, and usually it is used as an error code - 0 if the command returned successfully, or a number from 1 to 255 if not.

It's useful to display this in your prompt, but showing it when it's 0 seems kind of wasteful.

First of all, since every command (except for set) changes the status, you need to store it for later use as the first thing in your prompt. Use a local variable so it will be confined to your prompt function:

set -l last_status $status


And after that, you can set a string if it is not zero:

# Prompt status only if it's not 0
set -l stat
if test $last_status -ne 0

set stat (set_color red)"[$last_status]"(set_color normal) end


And to print it, we add it to our string join:

string join '' -- (set_color green) (prompt_pwd) (set_color normal) $stat '>'


If $last_status was 0, $stat is empty, and so it will simply disappear.

So our entire prompt is now:

function fish_prompt

set -l last_status $status
# Prompt status only if it's not 0
set -l stat
if test $last_status -ne 0
set stat (set_color red)"[$last_status]"(set_color normal)
end
string join '' -- (set_color green) (prompt_pwd) (set_color normal) $stat '>' end


And it looks like:

~/M/L/Oneknowing[1]>_


after we run false (which returns 1).

Save the prompt

Once you are happy with your prompt, you can save it with funcsave fish_prompt (see funcsave - save the definition of a function to the user's autoload directory) or write it to ~/.config/fish/functions/fish_prompt.fish yourself.

If you want to edit it again, open that file or use funced fish_prompt (see funced - edit a function interactively).

Where to go from here?

We have now built a simple but working and usable prompt, but of course more can be done.

  • prompt_login to describe the user/hostname/container or prompt_hostname to describe just the host
  • fish_is_root_user to help with changing the symbol for root.
  • fish_vcs_prompt to show version control information (or fish_git_prompt / fish_hg_prompt / fish_svn_prompt to limit it to specific systems)


  • You can add a right prompt by changing fish_right_prompt or a vi mode prompt by changing fish_mode_prompt.
  • Add the time when the prompt was printed
  • Show various integrations like python's venv
  • Color the parts differently.



You can look at fish's sample prompts for inspiration. Open up fish_config, find one you like and pick it. For example:

fish_config prompt show # <- shows all the sample prompts
fish_config prompt choose disco # <- this picks the "disco" prompt for this session
funced fish_prompt # <- opens fish_prompt in your editor, and reloads it once the editor exits


Design

This is a description of the design principles that have been used to design fish. The fish design has three high level goals. These are:

1.
Everything that can be done in other shell languages should be possible to do in fish, though fish may rely on external commands in doing so.
2.
Fish should be user-friendly, but not at the expense of expressiveness. Most tradeoffs between power and ease of use can be avoided with careful design.
3.
Whenever possible without breaking the above goals, fish should follow POSIX.

To achieve these high-level goals, the fish design relies on a number of more specific design principles. These are presented below, together with a rationale and a few examples for each.

The law of orthogonality

The shell language should have a small set of orthogonal features. Any situation where two features are related but not identical, one of them should be removed, and the other should be made powerful and general enough to handle all common use cases of either feature.

Rationale: Related features make the language larger, which makes it harder to learn. It also increases the size of the source code, making the program harder to maintain and update.

Examples:

  • Here documents are too similar to using echo inside of a pipeline.
  • Subshells, command substitution and process substitution are strongly related. fish only supports command substitution, the others can be achieved either using a block or the psub shellscript function.
  • Having both aliases and functions is confusing, especially since both of them have limitations and problems. fish functions have none of the drawbacks of either syntax.
  • The many Posix quoting styles are silly, especially $.

The law of responsiveness

The shell should attempt to remain responsive to the user at all times, even in the face of contended or unresponsive filesystems. It is only acceptable to block in response to a user initiated action, such as running a command.

Rationale: Bad performance increases user-facing complexity, because it trains users to recognize and route around slow use cases. It is also incredibly frustrating.

Examples:

  • Features like syntax highlighting and autosuggestions must perform all of their disk I/O asynchronously.
  • Startup should minimize forks and disk I/O, so that fish can be started even if the system is under load.

Configurability is the root of all evil

Every configuration option in a program is a place where the program is too stupid to figure out for itself what the user really wants, and should be considered a failure of both the program and the programmer who implemented it.

Rationale: Different configuration options are a nightmare to maintain, since the number of potential bugs caused by specific configuration combinations quickly becomes an issue. Configuration options often imply assumptions about the code which change when reimplementing the code, causing issues with backwards compatibility. But mostly, configuration options should be avoided since they simply should not exist, as the program should be smart enough to do what is best, or at least a good enough approximation of it.

Examples:

  • Fish allows the user to set various syntax highlighting colors. This is needed because fish does not know what colors the terminal uses by default, which might make some things unreadable. The proper solution would be for text color preferences to be defined centrally by the user for all programs, and for the terminal emulator to send these color properties to fish.
  • Fish does not allow you to set the number of history entries, different language substyles or any number of other common shell configuration options.

A special note on the evils of configurability is the long list of very useful features found in some shells, that are not turned on by default. Both zsh and bash support command-specific completions, but no such completions are shipped with bash by default, and they are turned off by default in zsh. Other features that zsh supports that are disabled by default include tab-completion of strings containing wildcards, a sane completion pager and a history file.

The law of user focus

When designing a program, one should first think about how to make an intuitive and powerful program. Implementation issues should only be considered once a user interface has been designed.

Rationale: This design rule is different than the others, since it describes how one should go about designing new features, not what the features should be. The problem with focusing on what can be done, and what is easy to do, is that too much of the implementation is exposed. This means that the user must know a great deal about the underlying system to be able to guess how the shell works, it also means that the language will often be rather low-level.

Examples:

  • There should only be one type of input to the shell, lists of commands. Loops, conditionals and variable assignments are all performed through regular commands.
  • The differences between built-in commands and shellscript functions should be made as small as possible. Built-ins and shellscript functions should have exactly the same types of argument expansion as other commands, should be possible to use in any position in a pipeline, and should support any I/O redirection.
  • Instead of forking when performing command substitution to provide a fake variable scope, all fish commands are performed from the same process, and fish instead supports true scoping.
  • All blocks end with the end built-in.

The law of discoverability

A program should be designed to make its features as easy as possible to discover for the user.

Rationale: A program whose features are discoverable turns a new user into an expert in a shorter span of time, since the user will become an expert on the program simply by using it.

The main benefit of a graphical program over a command-line-based program is discoverability. In a graphical program, one can discover all the common features by simply looking at the user interface and guessing what the different buttons, menus and other widgets do. The traditional way to discover features in command-line programs is through manual pages. This requires both that the user starts to use a different program, and then they remember the new information until the next time they use the same program.

Examples:

  • Everything should be tab-completable, and every tab completion should have a description.
  • Every syntax error and error in a built-in command should contain an error message describing what went wrong and a relevant help page. Whenever possible, errors should be flagged red by the syntax highlighter.
  • The help manual should be easy to read, easily available from the shell, complete and contain many examples
  • The language should be uniform, so that once the user understands the command/argument syntax, they will know the whole language, and be able to use tab-completion to discover new features.

Release notes

fish 4.0b1 (released December 17, 2024)

These are the draft release notes for fish 4.0.0. Like this release of fish itself, they are in beta and are not complete. Please report any issues you find.

fish's core code has been ported from C++ to Rust (#9512 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9512>). This means a large change in dependencies and how to build fish. Packagers should see the For Distributors section at the end.

Notable backwards-incompatible changes

  • As part of a larger binding rework, bind gained a new key notation. In most cases the old notation should keep working, but in rare cases you may have to change a bind invocation to use the new notation. See below for details.
  • Terminals that fail to ignore unrecognized OSC or CSI sequences may display garbage. We know cool-retro-term and emacs' ansi-term are affected, most mainstream terminals are not.
  • alt-left and alt-right will now move by one argument (which may contain quoted spaces), not just one word like ctrl-left and ctrl-right do.
  • alt-backspace will delete an entire argument, not just one word (which is ctrl-backspace now).
  • random will produce different values from previous versions of fish when used with the same seed, and will work more sensibly with small seed numbers. The seed was never guaranteed to give the same result across systems, so we do not expect this to have a large impact (#9593 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9593>).
  • Variables in command position that expand to a subcommand keyword are now forbidden to fix a likely user error. For example, set editor command emacs; $editor is no longer allowed (#10249 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10249>).
  • functions --handlers will now list handlers in a different order. Now it is definition order, first to last, where before it was last to first. This was never specifically defined, and we recommend not relying on a specific order (#9944 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9944>).
  • The qmark-noglob feature, introduced in fish 3.0, is enabled by default. That means ? will no longer act as a single-character glob. You can, for the time being, turn it back on by adding no-qmark-noglob to fish_features and restarting fish:

set -Ua fish_features no-qmark-noglob


The flag will eventually be made read-only, making it impossible to turn off.

  • fish no longer searches directories from the Windows system/user $PATH environment variable for Linux executables. To execute Linux binaries by name (i.e. not with a relative or absolute path) from a Windows folder, make sure the /mnt/c/... path is explicitly added to $fish_user_paths and not just automatically appended to $PATH by wsl.exe (#10506 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10506>).
  • Under Microsoft Windows Subsystem for Linux 1 (not WSL 2) , backgrounded jobs that have not been disowned and do not terminate on their own after a SIGHUP + SIGCONT sequence will be explicitly killed by fish on exit (after the usual prompt to close or disown them) to work around a WSL 1 deficiency that sees backgrounded processes that run into SIGTTOU remain in a suspended state indefinitely (#5263 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/5263>). The workaround is to explicitly disown processes you wish to outlive the shell session.

Notable improvements and fixes

fish now requests XTerm's modifyOtherKeys keyboard encoding and kitty keyboard protocol's <https://sw.kovidgoyal.net/kitty/keyboard-protocol/> progressive enhancements (#10359 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10359>). Depending on terminal support, this allows to binding more key combinations, including arbitrary combinations of modifiers ctrl, alt and shift, and distinguishing (for example) ctrl-i from tab.

Additionally, bind now supports a human-readable syntax in addition to byte sequences. This includes modifier names, and names for keys like enter and backspace. For example

  • bind up 'do something' binds the up-arrow key instead of a two-key sequence ("u" and then "p")
  • bind ctrl-x,alt-c 'do something' binds a sequence of two keys.

Any key argument that starts with an ASCII control character (like \e or \cX) or is up to 3 characters long, not a named key, and does not contain , or - will be interpreted in the old syntax to keep compatibility for the majority of bindings.

fish can now be built as a self-installing binary (#10367 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10367>). That means it can be easily built on one system and copied to another, where it can extract supporting files. To do this, run:

cargo install --path . # in a clone of the fish repository
# or `cargo build --release` and copy target/release/fish{,_indent,_key_reader} wherever you want


The first time it runs interactively, it will extract all the data files to ~/.local/share/fish/install/. To uninstall, remove the fish binaries and that directory.

This build system is experimental; the main build system, using cmake, remains the recommended approach for packaging and installation to a prefix.

  • A new function fish_should_add_to_history can be overridden to decide whether a command should be added to the history (#10302 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10302>).
  • ctrl-c during command input no longer prints ^C and a new prompt, but merely clears the command line. This restores the behavior from version 2.2. To revert to the old behavior, use bind ctrl-c __fish_cancel_commandline (#10213 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10213>).
  • Bindings can now mix special input functions and shell commands, so bind ctrl-g expand-abbr "commandline -i \n" works as expected (#8186 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8186>).
  • Special input functions run from bindings via commandline -f are now applied immediately, instead of after the currently executing binding (#3031 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/3031>). For example, commandline -i foo; commandline | grep foo succeeds now.
  • Undo history is no longer truncated after every command, but kept for the lifetime of the shell process.
  • The ctrl-r history search now uses glob syntax (#10131 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10131>).
  • The ctrl-r history search now operates only on the line or command substitution at cursor, making it easier to combine commands from history.
  • Abbreviations can now be restricted to specific commands. For instance:

abbr --add --command git back 'reset --hard HEAD^'


will expand "back" to reset --hard HEAD^, but only when the command is git (#9411 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9411>).


Deprecations and removed features

  • commandline --tokenize (short option -o) has been deprecated in favor of commandline --tokens-expanded (short option -x) which expands variables and other shell syntax, removing the need to use eval in completion scripts (#10212 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10212>).
  • Two new feature flags:
  • remove-percent-self (see status features) disables PID expansion of %self, which has been supplanted by $fish_pid (#10262 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10262>).
  • test-require-arg disables test's one-argument mode. That means test -n without an additional argument will return false, test -z will keep returning true. Any other option without an argument, anything that is not an option and no argument will be an error. This also goes for [, test's alternate name. This is a frequent source of confusion and so we are breaking with POSIX explicitly in this regard. In addition to the feature flag, there is a debug category "deprecated-test". Running fish with fish -d deprecated-test will show warnings whenever a test invocation that would change is used. (#10365 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10365>).

These can be enabled with:

set -Ua fish_features remove-percent-self test-require-arg


We intend to enable them by default in future, and after that eventually make them read-only.

  • Specifying key names as terminfo names (using the bind -k syntax) is deprecated and may be removed in a future version.
  • When a terminal pastes text into fish using bracketed paste, fish used to switch to a special paste bind mode. This bind mode has been removed. The behavior on paste is no longer configurable.
  • When an interactive fish is stopped or terminated by a signal that cannot be caught (SIGSTOP or SIGKILL), it may leave the terminal in a state where keypresses with modifiers are sent as CSI u sequences, instead of traditional control characters or escape sequences that are recognized by Readline and compatible programs, such as bash and python. If this happens, you can use the reset command from ncurses to restore the terminal state.
  • fish_key_reader --verbose no longer shows timing information.
  • Terminal information is no longer read from hashed terminfo databases, or termcap databases (#10269 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10269>). The vast majority of systems use a non-hashed terminfo database, which is still supported.

Scripting improvements


Interactive improvements


New or improved bindings

  • When the cursor is on a command that resolves to an executable script, alt-o will now open that script in your editor (#10266 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10266>).
  • During up-arrow history search, shift-delete will delete the current search item and move to the next older item. Previously this was only supported in the history pager.
  • shift-delete will also remove the currently-displayed autosuggestion from history, and remove it as a suggestion.
  • ctrl-Z (also known as ctrl-shift-z) is now bound to redo.
  • alt-delete now deletes the argument (which may contain quoted spaces) right of the cursor.
  • Some improvements to the alt-e binding which edits the command line in an external editor: - The editor's cursor position is copied back to fish. This is currently supported for Vim and Kakoune. - Cursor position synchronization is only supported for a set of known editors, which are now also detected in aliases which use complete --wraps. For example, use complete --wraps my-vim vim to synchronize cursors when EDITOR=my-vim. - Multiline commands are indented before being sent to the editor, which matches how they are displayed in fish.
  • The ...-path-component bindings, like backward-kill-path-component, now treat # as part of a path component (#10271 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10271>).
  • Bindings like alt-l that print output in between prompts now work correctly with multiline commandlines.
  • ctrl-c no longer cancels builtin read.
  • alt-d on an empty command line lists the directory history again. This restores the behavior of version 2.1.
  • history-prefix-search-backward and -forward now maintain the cursor position, instead of moving the cursor to the end of the command line (#10430 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10430>).
  • The following keys have refined behavior if the terminal supports the new keyboard encodings: - shift-enter now inserts a newline instead of executing the command line. - ctrl-backspace now deletes the last word instead of only one character (#10741 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10741>). - ctrl-delete deletes the next word (same as alt-d).
  • New special input functions: - forward-char-passive and backward-char-passive are like their non-passive variants but do not accept autosuggestions or move focus in the completion pager (#10398 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10398>). - forward-token, backward-token, kill-token, and backward-kill-token are similar to the *-bigword variants but for the whole argument token which includes escaped spaces (#2014 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/2014>).
  • The accept-autosuggestion special input function now returns false when there was nothing to accept (#10608 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10608>).
  • Vi mode has seen some improvements but continues to suffer from the lack of people working on it. - New default cursor shapes for insert and replace mode. - Insert-mode ctrl-n accepts autosuggestions (#10339 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10339>). - Outside insert mode, the cursor will no longer be placed beyond the last character on the commandline. - When the cursor is at the end of the commandline, a single l will accept an autosuggestion (#10286 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10286>). - The cursor position after pasting (p) has been corrected. - When the cursor is at the start of a line, escaping from insert mode no longer moves the cursor to the previous line. - Added bindings for clipboard interaction, like ",+,p and ",+,y,y. - Deleting in visual mode now moves the cursor back, matching vi (#10394 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10394>). - Support % motion (#10593 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10593>). - Support ab and ib vi text objects. New input functions are introduced jump-{to,till}-matching-bracket (#1842 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/1842>). - The E binding now correctly handles the last character of the word, by jumping to the next word (#9700 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9700>).

Completions

  • Command-specific tab completions may now offer results whose first character is a period. For example, it is now possible to tab-complete git add for files with leading periods. The default file completions hide these files, unless the token itself has a leading period (#3707 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/3707>).
  • Option completion now uses fuzzy subsequence filtering, just like non-option completion (#830 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/830>). This means that --fb may be completed to --foobar if there is no better match.
  • Completions that insert an entire token now use quotes instead of backslashes to escape special characters (#5433 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/5433>).
  • Historically, file name completions are provided after the last : or = within a token. This helps commands like rsync --files-from=. If the = or : is actually part of the filename, it will be escaped as \: and \=, and no longer get this special treatment. This matches Bash's behavior.
  • Various new completion scripts and numerous updates to existing ones.
  • Generated completions are now stored in $XDG_CACHE_HOME/fish or ~/.cache/fish by default (#10369 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10369>)

Improved terminal support


Other improvements


For distributors

fish has been ported to Rust. This means a significant change in dependencies, which are listed in the README. In short, Rust 1.70 or greater is required, and a C++ compiler is no longer needed (although a C compiler is still required, for some C glue code and the tests).

CMake remains the recommended build system, because of cargo's limited support for installing support files. Version 3.5 remains the minimum supported version. The Xcode generator for CMake is not supported any longer (#9924 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9924>)

fish no longer depends on the ncurses library, but still uses a terminfo database. When packaging fish, please add a dependency on the package containing your terminfo database instead of curses.


----



fish 3.7.1 (released March 19, 2024)

This release of fish fixes the following problems identified in fish 3.7.0:


This release also contains some improvements:


Some improvements to documentation and completions.


----



fish 3.7.0 (released January 1, 2024)

This release of fish includes a number of improvements over fish 3.6.4, detailed below. Although work continues on the porting of fish internals to the Rust programming language, that work is not included in this release. fish 3.7.0 and any future releases in the 3.7 series remain C++ programs.

Notable improvements and fixes

Improvements to the history pager, including:


Deprecations and removed features

LS_COLORS is no longer set automatically by the ls function (#10080 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10080>). Users that set .dircolors should manually import it using other means. Typically this would be set -gx LS_COLORS (dircolors -c .dircolors | string split ' ')[3]

Scripting improvements


Interactive improvements


Improved prompts


Completions

Added completions for:


Other improvements


For distributors



----



fish 3.6.4 (released December 5, 2023)

This release contains a complete fix for the test suite failure in fish 3.6.2 and 3.6.3.


----



fish 3.6.3 (released December 4, 2023)

This release contains a fix for a test suite failure in fish 3.6.2.


----



fish 3.6.2 (released December 4, 2023)

This release of fish contains a security fix for CVE-2023-49284, a minor security problem identified in fish 3.6.1 and previous versions (thought to affect all released versions of fish).

fish uses certain Unicode non-characters internally for marking wildcards and expansions. It incorrectly allowed these markers to be read on command substitution output, rather than transforming them into a safe internal representation.

For example, echo \UFDD2HOME has the same output as echo $HOME.

While this may cause unexpected behavior with direct input, this may become a minor security problem if the output is being fed from an external program into a command substitution where this output may not be expected.


----



fish 3.6.1 (released March 25, 2023)

This release of fish contains a number of fixes for problems identified in fish 3.6.1, as well as some enhancements.

Notable improvements and fixes

abbr --erase now also erases the universal variables used by the old abbr function. That means:

abbr --erase (abbr --list)


can now be used to clean out all old abbreviations (#9468 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9468>).

abbr --add --universal now warns about --universal being non-functional, to make it easier to detect old-style abbr calls (#9475 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9475>).

Deprecations and removed features

The Web-based configuration for abbreviations has been removed, as it was not functional with the changes abbreviations introduced in 3.6.0 (#9460 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9460>).

Scripting improvements


Interactive improvements


Improved prompts

The git prompt will compute the stash count to be used independently of the informative status (#9572 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9572>).

Completions

Added completions for:


Other improvements

Improvements and corrections to the documentation.

For distributors

fish 3.6.1 builds correctly on Cygwin (#9502 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9502>).


----



fish 3.6.0 (released January 7, 2023)

Notable improvements and fixes

  • They may optionally replace tokens anywhere on the command line, instead of only commands
  • Matching tokens may be described using a regular expression instead of a literal word
  • The replacement text may be produced by a fish function, instead of a literal word
  • They may position the cursor anywhere in the expansion, instead of at the end

For example:

function multicd

echo cd (string repeat -n (math (string length -- $argv[1]) - 1) ../) end abbr --add dotdot --regex '^\.\.+$' --function multicd


This expands .. to cd ../, ... to cd ../../ and .... to cd ../../../ and so on.

Or:

function last_history_item; echo $history[1]; end
abbr -a !! --position anywhere --function last_history_item


which expands !! to the last history item, anywhere on the command line, mimicking other shells' history expansion.

See the documentation for more.

path gained a new mtime subcommand to print the modification time stamp for files. For example, this can be used to handle cache file ages (#9057 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9057>):

> touch foo
> sleep 10
> path mtime --relative foo
10


string gained a new shorten subcommand to shorten strings to a given visible width (#9156 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9156>):

> string shorten --max 10 "Hello this is a long string"
Hello thi…


checks/set.fish (line 471): for: a,b: invalid variable name. See `help identifiers`
for a,b in y 1 z 3

^~^



Deprecations and removed features

  • The \x and \X escape syntax is now equivalent. \xAB previously behaved the same as \XAB, except that it would error if the value "AB" was larger than "7f" (127 in decimal, the highest ASCII value) (#9247 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9247>, #9245 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9245>, #1352 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/1352>).
  • The fish_git_prompt will now only turn on features if the appropriate variable has been set to a true value (of "1", "yes" or "true") instead of just checking if it is defined. This allows specifically turning features off without having to erase variables, such as via universal variables. If you have defined a variable to a different value and expect it to count as true, you need to change it (#9274 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9274>). For example, set -g __fish_git_prompt_show_informative_status 0 previously would have enabled informative status (because any value would have done so), but now it turns it off.
  • Abbreviations are no longer stored in universal variables. Existing universal abbreviations are still imported, but new abbreviations should be added to config.fish.
  • The short option -r for abbreviations has changed from rename to regex, for consistency with string.

Scripting improvements

argparse can now be used without option specifications, to allow using --min-args, --max-args or for commands that take no options (but might in future) (#9006 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9006>):

function my_copy

argparse --min-args 2 -- $argv
or return
cp $argv end


set --show now shows when a variable was inherited from fish's parent process, which should help with debugging (#9029 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9029>):

> set --show XDG_DATA_DIRS
$XDG_DATA_DIRS: set in global scope, exported, a path variable with 4 elements
$XDG_DATA_DIRS[1]: |/home/alfa/.local/share/flatpak/exports/share|
$XDG_DATA_DIRS[2]: |/var/lib/flatpak/exports/share|
$XDG_DATA_DIRS[3]: |/usr/local/share|
$XDG_DATA_DIRS[4]: |/usr/share|
$XDG_DATA_DIRS: originally inherited as |/home/alfa/.local/share/flatpak/exports/share:/var/lib/flatpak/exports/share:/usr/local/share/:/usr/share/|


math min 1 / 0, 5


which would previously print "5" (because in floating point division "1 / 0" yields infinite, and 5 is smaller than infinite) but will now return an error.

fish_clipboard_copy and fish_clipboard_paste can now be used in pipes (#9271 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9271>):

git rev-list 3.5.1 | fish_clipboard_copy
fish_clipboard_paste | string join + | math


status fish-path returns a fully-normalised path, particularly noticeable on NetBSD (#9085 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9085>).

Interactive improvements


Completions

Added completions for:


Improved terminal support

Opening help on WSL now uses PowerShell to open the browser if available, removing some awkward UNC path errors (#9119 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9119>).

Other improvements


Fixed bugs


For distributors

The vendored PCRE2 sources have been removed. It is recommended to declare PCRE2 as a dependency when packaging fish. If the CMake variable FISH_USE_SYSTEM_PCRE2 is false, fish will now download and build PCRE2 from the official repo (#8355 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8355>, #8363 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8363>). Note this variable defaults to true if PCRE2 is found installed on the system.


----



fish 3.5.1 (released July 20, 2022)

This release of fish introduces the following small enhancements:


Improvements to some completions.

This release also fixes a number of problems identified in fish 3.5.0.



----



fish 3.5.0 (released June 16, 2022)

Notable improvements and fixes

A new path builtin command to filter and transform paths (#7659 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/7659>, #8958 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8958>). For example, to list all the separate extensions used on files in /usr/share/man (after removing one extension, commonly a ".gz"):

path filter -f /usr/share/man/** | path change-extension '' | path extension | path sort -u



Deprecations and removed features

The stderr-nocaret feature flag, introduced in fish 3.0 and enabled by default in fish 3.1, has been made read-only. That means it is no longer possible to disable it, and code supporting the ^ redirection has been removed (#8857 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8857>, #8865 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8865>).

To recap: fish used to support ^ to redirect stderr, so you could use commands like:

test "$foo" -gt 8 ^/dev/null


to ignore error messages. This made the ^ symbol require escaping and quoting, and was a bit of a weird shortcut considering 2> already worked, which is only one character longer.

So the above can simply become:

test "$foo" -gt 8 2>/dev/null


The following feature flags have been enabled by default:
  • regex-easyesc, which makes string replace -r not do a superfluous round of unescaping in the replacement expression. That means e.g. to escape any "a" or "b" in an argument you can use string replace -ra '([ab])' '\\\\$1' foobar instead of needing 8 backslashes.

    This only affects the replacement expression, not the match expression (the '([ab])' part in the example). A survey of plugins on GitHub did not turn up any affected code, so we do not expect this to affect many users.

    This flag was introduced in fish 3.1.

  • ampersand-nobg-in-token, which means that & will not create a background job if it occurs in the middle of a word. For example, echo foo&bar will print "foo&bar" instead of running echo foo in the background and then starting bar as a second job.

    Reformatting with fish_indent would already introduce spaces, turning echo foo&bar into echo foo & bar.

    This flag was introduced in fish 3.4.


To turn off these flags, add no-regex-easyesc or no-ampersand-nobg-in-token to fish_features and restart fish:

set -Ua fish_features no-regex-easyesc


Like stderr-nocaret, they will eventually be made read-only.

  • Most string subcommands no longer append a newline to their input if the input didn't have one (#8473 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8473>, #3847 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/3847>)
  • Fish's escape sequence removal (like for string length --visible or to figure out how wide the prompt is) no longer has special support for non-standard color sequences like from Data General terminals, e.g. the Data General Dasher D220 from 1984. This removes a bunch of work in the common case, allowing string length --visible to be much faster with unknown escape sequences. We don't expect anyone to have ever used fish with such a terminal (#8769 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8769>).
  • Code to upgrade universal variables from fish before 3.0 has been removed. Users who upgrade directly from fish versions 2.7.1 or before will have to set their universal variables & abbreviations again. (#8781 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8781>)
  • The meaning of an empty color variable has changed (#8793 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8793>). Previously, when a variable was set but empty, it would be interpreted as the "normal" color. Now, empty color variables cause the same effect as unset variables - the general highlighting variable for that type is used instead. For example:

set -g fish_color_command blue
set -g fish_color_keyword


would previously make keywords "normal" (usually white in a dark terminal). Now it'll make them blue. To achieve the previous behavior, use the normal color explicitly: set -g fish_color_keyword normal.

This makes it easier to make self-contained color schemes that don't accidentally use color that was set before. fish_config has been adjusted to set known color variables that a theme doesn't explicitly set to empty.

  • eval is now a reserved keyword, so it can't be used as a function name. This follows set and read, and is necessary because it can't be cleanly shadowed by a function - at the very least eval set -l argv foo breaks. Fish will ignore autoload files for it, so left over eval.fish from previous fish versions won't be loaded.
  • The git prompt in informative mode now defaults to skipping counting untracked files, as this was extremely slow. To turn it on, set __fish_git_prompt_showuntrackedfiles or set the git config value "bash.showuntrackedfiles" to true explicitly (which can be done for individual repositories). The "informative+vcs" sample prompt already skipped display of untracked files, but didn't do so in a way that skipped the computation, so it should be quite a bit faster in many cases (#8980 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8980>).
  • The __terlar_git_prompt function, used by the "Terlar" sample prompt, has been rebuilt as a configuration of the normal fish_git_prompt to ease maintenance, improve performance and add features (like reading per-repo git configuration). Some slight changes remain; users who absolutely must have the same behavior are encouraged to copy the old function (#9011 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/9011>, #7918 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/7918>, #8979 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8979>).

Scripting improvements

math 5 + 2_123_252


math's min and max functions now take a variable number of arguments instead of always requiring 2 (#8644 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8644>, #8646 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8646>):

> math min 8,2,4
2



Interactive improvements


New or improved bindings


Improved prompts

A new Astronaut prompt (#8775 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8775>), a multi-line prompt using plain text reminiscent of the Starship.rs prompt.

Completions

Added completions for:

complete can now be given multiple --condition options. They will be attempted in the order they were given, and only if all succeed will the completion be made available (as if they were connected with &&). This helps with caching - fish's complete system stores the return value of each condition as long as the commandline doesn't change, so this can reduce the number of conditions that need to be evaluated (#8536 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8536>, #8967 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8967>).

Improved terminal support


For distributors



----



fish 3.4.1 (released March 25, 2022)

This release of fish fixes the following problems identified in fish 3.4.0:


If you are upgrading from version 3.3.1 or before, please also review the release notes for 3.4.0 (included below).


----



fish 3.4.0 (released March 12, 2022)

Notable improvements and fixes

fish's command substitution syntax has been extended: $(cmd) now has the same meaning as (cmd) but it can be used inside double quotes, to prevent line splitting of the results (#159 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/159>):

foo (bar | string collect)
# can now be written as
foo "$(bar)"
# and
foo (bar)
# can now be written as
foo $(bar)
# this will still split on newlines only.


  • Complementing the prompt command in 3.3.0, fish_config gained a theme subcommand to show and pick from the sample themes (meaning color schemes) directly in the terminal, instead of having to open a Web browser. For example fish_config theme choose Nord loads the Nord theme in the current session (#8132 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8132>). The current theme can be saved with fish_config theme dump, and custom themes can be added by saving them in ~/.config/fish/themes/.
  • set and read learned a new option, --function, to set a variable in the function's top scope. This should be a more familiar way of scoping variables and avoids issues with --local, which is actually block-scoped (#565 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/565>, #8145 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8145>):

function demonstration

if true
set --function foo bar
set --local baz banana
end
echo $foo # prints "bar" because $foo is still valid
echo $baz # prints nothing because $baz went out of scope end


string pad now excludes escape sequences like colors that fish knows about, and a new --visible flag to string length makes it use that kind of visible width. This is useful to get the number of terminal cells an already colored string would occupy, like in a prompt. (#8182 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8182>, #7784 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/7784>, #4012 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/4012>):

> string length --visible (set_color red)foo
3


  • Performance improvements to globbing, especially on systems using glibc. In some cases (large directories with files with many numbers in the names) this almost halves the time taken to expand the glob.
  • Autosuggestions can now be turned off by setting $fish_autosuggestion_enabled to 0, and (almost) all highlighting can be turned off by choosing the new "None" theme. The exception is necessary colors, like those which distinguish autosuggestions from the actual command line. (#8376 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8376>)
  • The fish_git_prompt function, which is included in the default prompts, now overrides git to avoid running commands set by per-repository configuration. This avoids a potential security issue in some circumstances, and has been assigned CVE-2022-20001 (#8589 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8589>).

Deprecations and removed features

A new feature flag, ampersand-nobg-in-token makes & only act as background operator if followed by a separator. In combination with qmark-noglob, this allows entering most URLs at the command line without quoting or escaping (#7991 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/7991>). For example:

> echo foo&bar # will print "foo&bar", instead of running "echo foo" in the background and executing "bar"
> echo foo & bar # will still run "echo foo" in the background and then run "bar"
# with both ampersand-nobg-in-token and qmark-noglob, this argument has no special characters anymore
> open https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQw4w9WgXcQ&feature=youtu.be


As a reminder, feature flags can be set on startup with fish --features ampersand-nobg-in-token,qmark-noglob or with a universal variable called fish_features:

> set -Ua fish_features ampersand-nobg-in-token



Scripting improvements

  • string collect supports a new --allow-empty option, which will output one empty argument in a command substitution that has no output (#8054 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8054>). This allows commands like test -n (echo -n | string collect --allow-empty) to work more reliably. Note this can also be written as test -n "$(echo -n)" (see above).
  • string match gained a --groups-only option, which makes it only output capturing groups, excluding the full match. This allows string match to do simple transformations (#6056 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/6056>):

> string match -r --groups-only '(.*)fish' 'catfish' 'twofish' 'blue fish' | string escape
cat
two
'blue '



Interactive improvements


New or improved bindings


Improved prompts

> prompt_pwd --full-length-dirs 2 -d 1 ~/dev/fish-shell/share/tools/web_config
~/d/f/s/tools/web_config



Completions

Added completions for:


Improved terminal support


Other improvements


For distributors



----



fish 3.3.1 (released July 6, 2021)

This release of fish fixes the following problems identified in fish 3.3.0:


A number of improvements to the documentation, and fixes for completions, are included as well.

If you are upgrading from version 3.2.2 or before, please also review the release notes for 3.3.0 (included below).


----



fish 3.3.0 (released June 28, 2021)

Notable improvements and fixes


Deprecations and removed features


Scripting improvements


Interactive improvements


New or improved bindings


Improved prompts


Completions

Added completions for:


Improved terminal support


For distributors

fish runs correctly on platforms without the O_CLOEXEC flag for open(2) (#8023 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/8023>).


----



fish 3.2.2 (released April 7, 2021)

This release of fish fixes a number of additional issues identified in the fish 3.2 series:


If you are upgrading from version 3.1.2 or before, please also review the release notes for 3.2.1 and 3.2.0 (included below).


----



fish 3.2.1 (released March 18, 2021)

This release of fish fixes the following problems identified in fish 3.2.0:


It also includes some small enhancements:


If you are upgrading from version 3.1.2 or before, please also review the release notes for 3.2.0 (included below).


----



fish 3.2.0 (released March 1, 2021)

Notable improvements and fixes

  • Undo and redo support for the command-line editor and pager search (#1367 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/1367>). By default, undo is bound to Control+Z, and redo to Alt+/.
  • Builtins can now output before all data is read. For example, string replace no longer has to read all of stdin before it can begin to output. This makes it usable also for pipes where the previous command hasn't finished yet, like:

# Show all dmesg lines related to "usb"
dmesg -w | string match '*usb*'


Prompts will now be truncated instead of replaced with "> " if they are wider than the terminal (#904 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/904>). For example:

~/dev/build/fish-shell-git/src/fish-shell/build (makepkg)>


will turn into:

…h-shell/build (makepkg)>


It is still possible to react to the COLUMNS variable inside the prompt to implement smarter behavior.

fish_add_path /opt/mycoolthing/bin


will add /opt/mycoolthing/bin to the beginning of $fish_user_path without creating duplicates, so it can be called safely from config.fish or interactively, and the path will just be there, once.

Better errors with "test" (#6030 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/6030>):

> test 1 = 2 and echo true or false
test: Expected a combining operator like '-a' at index 4
1 = 2 and echo true or echo false

^


This includes numbering the index from 1 instead of 0, like fish lists.


Syntax changes and new commands

Range limits in index range expansions like $x[$start..$end] may be omitted: $start and $end default to 1 and -1 (the last item) respectively (#6574 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/6574>):

echo $var[1..]
echo $var[..-1]
echo $var[..]


All print the full list $var.

When globbing, a segment which is exactly ** may now match zero directories. For example **/foo may match foo in the current directory (#7222 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/7222>).

Scripting improvements


Interactive improvements

fish --debug=-warning-path



New or improved bindings


Improved prompts


Improved terminal support


Completions

Added completions for

Lots of improvements to completions, including:


For distributors


Deprecations and removed features

  • The fish_color_match variable is no longer used. (Previously this controlled the color of matching quotes and parens when using read).
  • fish 3.2.0 will be the last release in which the redirection to standard error with the ^ character is enabled. The stderr-nocaret feature flag will be changed to "on" in future releases.
  • string is now a reserved word and cannot be used for function names (see above).
  • fish_vi_cursor's option --force-iterm has been deprecated (see above).
  • command, jobs and type long-form option --quiet is deprecated in favor of --query (see above).
  • The fish_command_not_found event is no longer emitted, instead there is a function of that name. By default it will call a previously-defined __fish_command_not_found_handler. To emit the event manually use emit fish_command_not_found.
  • The fish_prompt event no longer fires when read is used. If you need a function to run any time read is invoked by a script, use the new fish_read event instead (#7039 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/7039>).
  • To disable the greeting message permanently it is no longer enough to just run set fish_greeting interactively as it is no longer implicitly a universal variable. Use set -U fish_greeting or disable it in config.fish with set -g fish_greeting.
  • The long-deprecated and non-functional -m/--read-mode options to read were removed in 3.1b1. Using the short form, or a never-implemented -B option, no longer crashes fish (#7659 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/7659>).
  • With the addition of new categories for debug options, the old numbered debugging levels have been removed.

For distributors and developers



----



fish 3.1.2 (released April 29, 2020)

This release of fish fixes a major issue discovered in fish 3.1.1:

Commands such as fzf and enhancd, when used with eval, would hang. eval buffered output too aggressively, which has been fixed (#6955 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/6955>).

If you are upgrading from version 3.0.0 or before, please also review the release notes for 3.1.1, 3.1.0 and 3.1b1 (included below).


----



fish 3.1.1 (released April 27, 2020)

This release of fish fixes a number of major issues discovered in fish 3.1.0.


This release also includes:

  • several changes to improve macOS compatibility with code signing and notarization;
  • several improvements to completions; and
  • several content and formatting improvements to the documentation.

If you are upgrading from version 3.0.0 or before, please also review the release notes for 3.1.0 and 3.1b1 (included below).

Errata for fish 3.1

A new builtin, time, was introduced in the fish 3.1 releases. This builtin is a reserved word (like test, function, and others) because of the way it is implemented, and functions can no longer be named time. This was not clear in the fish 3.1b1 changelog.


----



fish 3.1.0 (released February 12, 2020)

Compared to the beta release of fish 3.1b1, fish version 3.1.0:


If you are upgrading from version 3.0.0 or before, please also review the release notes for 3.1b1 (included below).


----



fish 3.1b1 (released January 26, 2020)

Notable improvements and fixes


Syntax changes and new commands


Scripting improvements


Interactive improvements


New or improved bindings


Improved prompts

  • The Git prompt in informative mode now shows the number of stashes if enabled.
  • The Git prompt now has an option ($__fish_git_prompt_use_informative_chars) to use the (more modern) informative characters without enabling informative mode.
  • The default prompt now also features VCS integration and will color the host if running via SSH (#6375 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/6375>).
  • The default and example prompts print the pipe status if an earlier command in the pipe fails.
  • The default and example prompts try to resolve exit statuses to signal names when appropriate.

Improved terminal output


Completions

Added completions for


Deprecations and removed features

  • The vcs-prompt functions have been promoted to names without double-underscore, so __fish_git_prompt is now fish_git_prompt, __fish_vcs_prompt is now fish_vcs_prompt, __fish_hg_prompt is now fish_hg_prompt and __fish_svn_prompt is now fish_svn_prompt. Shims at the old names have been added, and the variables have kept their old names (#5586 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/5586>).
  • string replace has an additional round of escaping in the replacement expression, so escaping backslashes requires many escapes (eg string replace -ra '([ab])' '\\\\\\\$1' a). The new feature flag regex-easyesc can be used to disable this, so that the same effect can be achieved with string replace -ra '([ab])' '\\\\$1' a (#5556 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/5556>). As a reminder, the intention behind feature flags is that this will eventually become the default and then only option, so scripts should be updated.
  • The fish_vi_mode function, deprecated in fish 2.3, has been removed. Use fish_vi_key_bindings instead (#6372 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/6372>).

For distributors and developers

  • fish 3.0 introduced a CMake-based build system. In fish 3.1, both the Autotools-based build and legacy Xcode build system have been removed, leaving only the CMake build system. All distributors and developers must install CMake.
  • fish now depends on the common tee external command, for the psub process substitution function.
  • The documentation is now built with Sphinx. The old Doxygen-based documentation system has been removed. Developers, and distributors who wish to rebuild the documentation, must install Sphinx.
  • The INTERNAL_WCWIDTH build option has been removed, as fish now always uses an internal wcwidth function. It has a number of configuration options that make it more suitable for general use (#5777 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/5777>).
  • mandoc can now be used to format the output from --help if nroff is not installed, reducing the number of external dependencies on systems with mandoc installed (#5489 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/5489>).
  • Some bugs preventing building on Solaris-derived systems such as Illumos were fixed (#5458 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/5458>, #5461 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/5461>, #5611 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/5611>).
  • Completions for npm, bower and yarn no longer require the jq utility for full functionality, but will use Python instead if it is available.
  • The paths for completions, functions and configuration snippets have been extended. On systems that define XDG_DATA_DIRS, each of the directories in this variable are searched in the subdirectories fish/vendor_completions.d, fish/vendor_functions.d, and fish/vendor_conf.d respectively. On systems that do not define this variable in the environment, the vendor directories are searched for in both the installation prefix and the default “extra” directory, which now defaults to /usr/local (#5029 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/5029>).


----



fish 3.0.2 (released February 19, 2019)

This release of fish fixes an issue discovered in fish 3.0.1.

Fixes and improvements

The PWD environment variable is now ignored if it does not resolve to the true working directory, fixing strange behaviour in terminals started by editors and IDEs (#5647 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/5647>).

If you are upgrading from version 2.7.1 or before, please also review the release notes for 3.0.1, 3.0.0 and 3.0b1 (included below).

fish 3.0.1 (released February 11, 2019)

This release of fish fixes a number of major issues discovered in fish 3.0.0.

Fixes and improvements


Known issues

There is one significant known issue that was not corrected before the release:

fish does not run correctly under Windows Services for Linux before Windows 10 version 1809/17763, and the message warning of this may not be displayed (#5619 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/5619>).

If you are upgrading from version 2.7.1 or before, please also review the release notes for 3.0.0 and 3.0b1 (included below).


----



fish 3.0.0 (released December 28, 2018)

fish 3 is a major release, which introduces some breaking changes alongside improved functionality. Although most existing scripts will continue to work, they should be reviewed against the list contained in the 3.0b1 release notes below.

Compared to the beta release of fish 3.0b1, fish version 3.0.0:


There is one significant known issue which was not able to be corrected before the release:

fish 3.0.0 builds on Cygwin (#5423 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/5423>), but does not run correctly (#5426 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/5426>) and will result in a hanging terminal when started. Cygwin users are encouraged to continue using 2.7.1 until a release which corrects this is available.

If you are upgrading from version 2.7.1 or before, please also review the release notes for 3.0b1 (included below).


----



fish 3.0b1 (released December 11, 2018)

fish 3 is a major release, which introduces some breaking changes alongside improved functionality. Although most existing scripts will continue to work, they should be reviewed against the list below.

Notable non-backward compatible changes


Deprecations

With the release of fish 3, a number of features have been marked for removal in the future. All users are encouraged to explore alternatives. A small number of these features are currently behind feature flags, which are turned on at present but may be turned off by default in the future.

A new feature flags mechanism is added for staging deprecations and breaking changes. Feature flags may be specified at launch with fish --features ... or by setting the universal fish_features variable. (#4940 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/4940>)


Notable fixes and improvements

Syntax changes and new commands


New features in commands


Interactive improvements


  • Lots of improvements to completions (especially darcs (#5112 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/5112>), git, hg and sudo).
  • Completions for yarn and npm now require the all-the-package-names NPM package for full functionality.
  • Completions for bower and yarn now require the jq utility for full functionality.
  • Improved French translations.

Other fixes and improvements


For distributors and developers

  • fish ships with a new build system based on CMake. CMake 3.2 is the minimum required version. Although the autotools-based Makefile and the Xcode project are still shipped with this release, they will be removed in the near future. All distributors and developers are encouraged to migrate to the CMake build.
  • Build scripts for most platforms no longer require bash, using the standard sh instead.
  • The hostname command is no longer required for fish to operate.

fish 2.7.1 (released December 23, 2017)

This release of fish fixes an issue where iTerm 2 on macOS would display a warning about paste bracketing being left on when starting a new fish session (#4521 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/4521>).

If you are upgrading from version 2.6.0 or before, please also review the release notes for 2.7.0 and 2.7b1 (included below).

fish 2.7.0 (released November 23, 2017)

There are no major changes between 2.7b1 and 2.7.0. If you are upgrading from version 2.6.0 or before, please also review the release notes for 2.7b1 (included below).

Xcode builds and macOS packages could not be produced with 2.7b1, but this is fixed in 2.7.0.

fish 2.7b1 (released October 31, 2017)

Notable improvements


Other significant changes


  • Lots of improvements to completions.
  • Updated Chinese and French translations.
  • Improved completions for:


fish 2.6.0 (released June 3, 2017)

Since the beta release of fish 2.6b1, fish version 2.6.0 contains a number of minor fixes, new completions for magneto (#4043 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/4043>), and improvements to the documentation.

Known issues

Apple macOS Sierra 10.12.5 introduced a problem with launching web browsers from other programs using AppleScript. This affects the fish Web configuration (fish_config); users on these platforms will need to manually open the address displayed in the terminal, such as by copying and pasting it into a browser. This problem will be fixed with macOS 10.12.6.

If you are upgrading from version 2.5.0 or before, please also review the release notes for 2.6b1 (included below).


----



fish 2.6b1 (released May 14, 2017)

Notable fixes and improvements


Other significant changes



----



fish 2.5.0 (released February 3, 2017)

There are no major changes between 2.5b1 and 2.5.0. If you are upgrading from version 2.4.0 or before, please also review the release notes for 2.5b1 (included below).

Notable fixes and improvements

The Home, End, Insert, Delete, Page Up and Page Down keys work in Vi-style key bindings (#3731 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/3731>).


----



fish 2.5b1 (released January 14, 2017)

Platform Changes

Starting with version 2.5, fish requires a more up-to-date version of C++, specifically C++11 (from 2011). This affects some older platforms:

Linux

For users building from source, GCC’s g++ 4.8 or later, or LLVM’s clang 3.3 or later, are known to work. Older platforms may require a newer compiler installed.

Unfortunately, because of the complexity of the toolchain, binary packages are no longer published by the fish-shell developers for the following platforms:

  • Red Hat Enterprise Linux and CentOS 5 & 6 for 64-bit builds
  • Ubuntu 12.04 (EoLTS April 2017)
  • Debian 7 (EoLTS May 2018)

Installing newer version of fish on these systems will require building from source.

OS X SnowLeopard

Starting with version 2.5, fish requires a C++11 standard library on OS X 10.6 (“SnowLeopard”). If this library is not installed, you will see this error: dyld: Library not loaded: /usr/lib/libc++.1.dylib

MacPorts is the easiest way to obtain this library. After installing the SnowLeopard MacPorts release from the install page, run:

sudo port -v install libcxx


Now fish should launch successfully. (Please open an issue if it does not.)

This is only necessary on 10.6. OS X 10.7 and later include the required library by default.

Other significant changes


Notable fixes and improvements



----



fish 2.4.0 (released November 8, 2016)

There are no major changes between 2.4b1 and 2.4.0.

Notable fixes and improvements

  • The documentation is now generated properly and with the correct version identifier.
  • Automatic cursor changes are now only enabled on the subset of XTerm versions known to support them, resolving a problem where older versions printed garbage to the terminal before and after every prompt (#3499 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/3499>).
  • Improved the title set in Apple Terminal.app.
  • Added completions for defaults and improved completions for diskutil (#3478 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/3478>).


----



fish 2.4b1 (released October 18, 2016)

Significant changes


Notable fixes and improvements




----



fish 2.3.1 (released July 3, 2016)

This is a functionality and bugfix release. This release does not contain all the changes to fish since the last release, but fixes a number of issues directly affecting users at present and includes a small number of new features.

Significant changes


Notable fixes and improvements



----



fish 2.3.0 (released May 20, 2016)

There are no significant changes between 2.3.0 and 2.3b2.

Other notable fixes and improvements


Known issues

Interactive commands started from fish configuration files or from the -c option may, under certain circumstances, be started with incorrect terminal modes and fail to behave as expected. A fix is planned but requires further testing (#2619 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/2619>).


----



fish 2.3b2 (released May 5, 2016)

Significant changes

  • A new fish_realpath builtin and associated function to allow the use of realpath even on those platforms that don’t ship an appropriate command (#2932 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/2932>).
  • Alt-# toggles the current command line between commented and uncommented states, making it easy to save a command in history without executing it.
  • The fish_vi_mode function is now deprecated in favour of fish_vi_key_bindings.

Other notable fixes and improvements



----



fish 2.3b1 (released April 19, 2016)

Significant Changes

  • A new string builtin to handle… strings! This builtin will measure, split, search and replace text strings, including using regular expressions. It can also be used to turn lists into plain strings using join. string can be used in place of sed, grep, tr, cut, and awk in many situations. (#2296 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/2296>)
  • Allow using escape as the Meta modifier key, by waiting after seeing an escape character wait up to 300ms for an additional character. This is consistent with readline (e.g. bash) and can be configured via the fish_escape_delay_ms variable. This allows using escape as the Meta modifier. (#1356 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/1356>)
  • Add new directories for vendor functions and configuration snippets (#2500 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/2500>)
  • A new fish_realpath builtin and associated realpath function should allow scripts to resolve path names via realpath regardless of whether there is an external command of that name; albeit with some limitations. See the associated documentation.

Backward-incompatible changes


Other notable fixes and improvements




----



fish 2.2.0 (released July 12, 2015)

Significant changes

  • Abbreviations: the new abbr command allows for interactively-expanded abbreviations, allowing quick access to frequently-used commands (#731 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/731>).
  • Vi mode: run fish_vi_mode to switch fish into the key bindings and prompt familiar to users of the Vi editor (#65 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/65>).
  • New inline and interactive pager, which will be familiar to users of zsh (#291 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/291>).
  • Underlying architectural changes: the fishd universal variable server has been removed as it was a source of many bugs and security problems. Notably, old fish sessions will not be able to communicate universal variable changes with new fish sessions. For best results, restart all running instances of fish.
  • The web-based configuration tool has been redesigned, featuring a prompt theme chooser and other improvements.
  • New German, Brazilian Portuguese, and Chinese translations.

Backward-incompatible changes

These are kept to a minimum, but either change undocumented features or are too hard to use in their existing forms. These changes may break existing scripts.


Other notable fixes and improvements



----



fish 2.1.2 (released Feb 24, 2015)

fish 2.1.2 contains a workaround for a filesystem bug in Mac OS X Yosemite. #1859 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/1859>

Specifically, after installing fish 2.1.1 and then rebooting, “Verify Disk” in Disk Utility will report “Invalid number of hard links.” We don’t have any reports of data loss or other adverse consequences. fish 2.1.2 avoids triggering the bug, but does not repair an already affected filesystem. To repair the filesystem, you can boot into Recovery Mode and use Repair Disk from Disk Utility. Linux and versions of OS X prior to Yosemite are believed to be unaffected.

There are no other changes in this release.


----



fish 2.1.1 (released September 26, 2014)

Important: if you are upgrading, stop all running instances of fishd as soon as possible after installing this release; it will be restarted automatically. On most systems, there will be no further action required. Note that some environments (where XDG_RUNTIME_DIR is set), such as Fedora 20, will require a restart of all running fish processes before universal variables work as intended.

Distributors are highly encouraged to call killall fishd, pkill fishd or similar in installation scripts, or to warn their users to do so.

Security fixes


Other fixes

fishd now ignores SIGPIPE, fixing crashes using tools like GNU Parallel and which occurred more often as a result of the other fishd changes. #1084 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/1084> & #1690 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/1690>


----



fish 2.1.0

Significant Changes

  • Tab completions will fuzzy-match files. #568 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/568>

    When tab-completing a file, fish will first attempt prefix matches (foo matches foobar), then substring matches (ooba matches foobar), and lastly subsequence matches (fbr matches foobar). For example, in a directory with files foo1.txt, foo2.txt, foo3.txt…, you can type only the numeric part and hit tab to fill in the rest.

    This feature is implemented for files and executables. It is not yet implemented for options (like --foobar), and not yet implemented across path components (like /u/l/b to match /usr/local/bin).

  • Redirections now work better across pipelines. #110 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/110>, #877 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/877>

    In particular, you can pipe stderr and stdout together, for example, with cmd ^&1 | tee log.txt, or the more familiar cmd 2>&1 | tee log.txt.

  • A single ``%`` now expands to the last job backgrounded. #1008 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/1008>

    Previously, a single % would pid-expand to either all backgrounded jobs, or all jobs owned by your user. Now it expands to the last job backgrounded. If no job is in the background, it will fail to expand. In particular, fg % can be used to put the most recent background job in the foreground.


Other Notable Fixes



----



fish 2.0.0

Significant Changes

Command substitutions now modify ``$status`` :issue:`547`. Previously the exit status of command substitutions (like (pwd)) was ignored; however now it modifies $status. Furthermore, the set command now only sets $status on failure; it is untouched on success. This allows for the following pattern:

if set python_path (which python)

... end


Because set does not modify $status on success, the if branch effectively tests whether which succeeded, and if so, whether the set also succeeded.

Improvements to PATH handling. There is a new variable, fish_user_paths, which can be set universally, and whose contents are appended to $PATH #527 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/527>
  • /etc/paths and /etc/paths.d are now respected on OS X
  • fish no longer modifies $PATH to find its own binaries


Other Notable Fixes



----



fishfish Beta r2

Bug Fixes

  • Implicit cd is back, for paths that start with one or two dots, a slash, or a tilde.
  • Overrides of default functions should be fixed. The “internalized scripts” feature is disabled for now.
  • Disabled delayed suspend. This is a strange job-control feature of BSD systems, including OS X. Disabling it frees up Control Y for other purposes; in particular, for yank, which now works on OS X.
  • fish_indent is fixed. In particular, the funced and funcsave functions work again.
  • A SIGTERM now ends the whole execution stack again (resolving #13 <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/13>).
  • Bumped the __fish_config_interactive version number so the default fish_color_autosuggestion kicks in.
  • fish_config better handles combined term256 and classic colors like “555 yellow”.

New Features

A history builtin, and associated interactive function that enables deleting history items. Example usage: * Print all history items beginning with echo: history --prefix echo * Print all history items containing foo: history --contains foo * Interactively delete some items containing foo: history --delete --contains foo

Credit to @siteshwar for implementation. Thanks @siteshwar!


----



fishfish Beta r1

Scripting

No changes! All existing fish scripts, config files, completions, etc. from trunk should continue to work.

New Features

  • Autosuggestions. Think URL fields in browsers. When you type a command, fish will suggest the rest of the command after the cursor, in a muted gray when possible. You can accept the suggestion with the right arrow key or Ctrl-F. Suggestions come from command history, completions, and some custom code for cd; there’s a lot of potential for improvement here. The suggestions are computed on a background pthread, so they never slow down your typing. The autosuggestion feature is incredible. I miss it dearly every time I use anything else.
  • term256 support where available, specifically modern xterms and OS X Lion. You can specify colors the old way (‘set_color cyan’) or by specifying RGB hex values (‘set_color FF3333’); fish will pick the closest supported color. Some xterms do not advertise term256 support either in the $TERM or terminfo max_colors field, but nevertheless support it. For that reason, fish will default into using it on any xterm (but it can be disabled with an environment variable).
  • Web-based configuration page. There is a new function ‘fish_config’. This spins up a simple Python web server and opens a browser window to it. From this web page, you can set your shell colors and view your functions, variables, and history; all changes apply immediately to all running shells. Eventually all configuration ought to be supported via this mechanism (but in addition to, not instead of, command line mechanisms).
  • Man page completions. There is a new function ‘fish_update_completions’. This function reads all the man1 files from your manpath, removes the roff formatting, parses them to find the commands and options, and outputs fish completions into ~/.config/fish/completions. It won’t overwrite existing completion files (except ones that it generated itself).

Programmatic Changes

  • fish is now entirely in C++. I have no particular love for C++, but it provides a ready memory-model to replace halloc. We’ve made an effort to keep it to a sane and portable subset (no C++11, no boost, no going crazy with templates or smart pointers), but we do use the STL and a little tr1.
  • halloc is entirely gone, replaced by normal C++ ownership semantics. If you don’t know what halloc is, well, now you have two reasons to be happy.
  • All the crufty C data structures are entirely gone. array_list_t, priority_queue_t, hash_table_t, string_buffer_t have been removed and replaced by STL equivalents like std::vector, std::map, and std::wstring. A lot of the string handling now uses std::wstring instead of wchar_t *
  • fish now spawns pthreads for tasks like syntax highlighting that require blocking I/O.
  • History has been completely rewritten. History files now use an extensible YAML-style syntax. History “merging” (multiple shells writing to the same history file) now works better. There is now a maximum history length of about 250k items (256 * 1024).
  • The parser has been “instanced,” so you can now create more than one.
  • Total #LoC has shrunk slightly even with the new features.

Performance

  • fish now runs syntax highlighting in a background thread, so typing commands is always responsive even on slow filesystems.
  • echo, test, and pwd are now builtins, which eliminates many forks.
  • The files in share/functions and share/completions now get ‘internalized’ into C strings that get compiled in with fish. This substantially reduces the number of files touched at startup. A consequence is that you cannot change these functions without recompiling, but often other functions depend on these “standard” functions, so changing them is perhaps not a good idea anyways.

Here are some system call counts for launching and then exiting fish with the default configuration, on OS X. The first column is fish trunk, the next column is with our changes, and the last column is bash for comparison. This data was collected via dtrace.

before

after

bash

open

9

4

5

fork

28

14

0

stat

131

85

11

lstat

670

0

0

read

332

80

4

write

172

149

0

The large number of forks relative to bash are due to fish’s insanely expensive default prompt, which is unchanged in my version. If we switch to a prompt comparable to bash’s (lame) default, the forks drop to 16 with trunk, 4 after our changes.

The large reduction in lstat() numbers is due to fish no longer needing to call ttyname() on OS X.

We’ve got some work to do to be as lean as bash, but we’re on the right track.

Contributing To Fish

This document tells you how you can contribute to fish.

Fish is free and open source software, distributed under the terms of the GPLv2.

Contributions are welcome, and there are many ways to contribute!

Whether you want to change some of the core Rust source, enhance or add a completion script or function, improve the documentation or translate something, this document will tell you how.

Getting Set Up

Fish is developed on Github, at https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell.

First, you'll need an account there, and you'll need a git clone of fish. Fork it on Github and then run:

git clone https://github.com/<USERNAME>/fish-shell.git


This will create a copy of the fish repository in the directory fish-shell in your current working directory.

Also, for most changes you want to run the tests and so you'd get a setup to compile fish. For that, you'll require:

  • Rust - when in doubt, try rustup
  • CMake
  • PCRE2 (headers and libraries) - optional, this will be downloaded if missing
  • gettext (headers and libraries) - optional, for translation support
  • Sphinx - optional, to build the documentation

Of course not everything is required always - if you just want to contribute something to the documentation you'll just need Sphinx, and if the change is very simple and obvious you can just send it in. Use your judgement!

Once you have your changes, open a pull request on https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/pulls.

Guidelines

In short:

  • Be conservative in what you need (keep to the agreed minimum supported Rust version, limit new dependencies)
  • Use automated tools to help you (including make test and build_tools/style.fish)

Contributing completions

Completion scripts are the most common contribution to fish, and they are very welcome.

In general, we'll take all well-written completion scripts for a command that is publically available. This means no private tools or personal scripts, and we do reserve the right to reject for other reasons.

Before you try to contribute them to fish, consider if the authors of the tool you are completing want to maintain the script instead. Often that makes more sense, specifically because they can add new options to the script immediately once they add them, and don't have to maintain one completion script for multiple versions. If the authors no longer wish to maintain the script, they can of course always contact the fish maintainers to hand it over, preferably by opening a PR. This isn't a requirement - if the authors don't want to maintain it, or you simply don't want to contact them, you can contribute your script to fish.

Completion scripts should

1.
Use as few dependencies as possible - try to use fish's builtins like string instead of grep and awk, use python to read json instead of jq (because it's already a soft dependency for fish's tools)
2.
If it uses a common unix tool, use posix-compatible invocations - ideally it would work on GNU/Linux, macOS, the BSDs and other systems
3.
Option and argument descriptions should be kept short. The shorter the description, the more likely it is that fish can use more columns.
4.
Function names should start with __fish, and functions should be kept in the completion file unless they're used elsewhere.
5.
Run fish_indent on your script.
6.
Try not to use minor convenience features right after they are available in fish - we do try to keep completion scripts backportable. If something has a real impact on the correctness or performance, feel free to use it, but if it is just a shortcut, please leave it.

Put your completion script into share/completions/name-of-command.fish. If you have multiple commands, you need multiple files.

If you want to add tests, you probably want to add a littlecheck test. See below for details.

Contributing documentation

The documentation is stored in doc_src/, and written in ReStructured Text and built with Sphinx.

To build it locally, run from the main fish-shell directory:

sphinx-build -j 8 -b html -n doc_src/ /tmp/fish-doc/


which will build the docs as html in /tmp/fish-doc. You can open it in a browser and see that it looks okay.

The builtins and various functions shipped with fish are documented in doc_src/cmds/.

Code Style

To ensure your changes conform to the style rules run

build_tools/style.fish


before committing your change. That will run our autoformatters:

  • rustfmt for Rust
  • fish_indent (shipped with fish) for fish script
  • black for python

If you’ve already committed your changes that’s okay since it will then check the files in the most recent commit. This can be useful after you’ve merged another person’s change and want to check that it’s style is acceptable. However, in that case it will run clang-format to ensure the entire file, not just the lines modified by the commit, conform to the style.

If you want to check the style of the entire code base run

build_tools/style.fish --all


That command will refuse to restyle any files if you have uncommitted changes.

Fish Script Style Guide

1.
All fish scripts, such as those in the share/functions and tests directories, should be formatted using the fish_indent command.
2.
Function names should be in all lowercase with words separated by underscores. Private functions should begin with an underscore. The first word should be fish if the function is unique to fish.
3.
The first word of global variable names should generally be fish for public vars or _fish for private vars to minimize the possibility of name clashes with user defined vars.

Configuring Your Editor for Fish Scripts

If you use Vim: Install vim-fish <https://github.com/dag/vim-fish>, make sure you have syntax and filetype functionality in ~/.vimrc:

syntax enable
filetype plugin indent on


Then turn on some options for nicer display of fish scripts in ~/.vim/ftplugin/fish.vim:

" Set up :make to use fish for syntax checking.
compiler fish
" Set this to have long lines wrap inside comments.
setlocal textwidth=79
" Enable folding of block structures in fish.
setlocal foldmethod=expr


If you use Emacs: Install fish-mode <https://github.com/wwwjfy/emacs-fish> (also available in melpa and melpa-stable) and (setq-default indent-tabs-mode nil) for it (via a hook or in use-packages “:init” block). It can also be made to run fish_indent via e.g.

(add-hook 'fish-mode-hook (lambda ()

(add-hook 'before-save-hook 'fish_indent-before-save)))


Rust Style Guide

Use cargo fmt and cargo clippy. Clippy warnings can be turned off if there's a good reason to.

Testing

The source code for fish includes a large collection of tests. If you are making any changes to fish, running these tests is a good way to make sure the behaviour remains consistent and regressions are not introduced. Even if you don’t run the tests on your machine, they will still be run via Github Actions.

You are strongly encouraged to add tests when changing the functionality of fish, especially if you are fixing a bug to help ensure there are no regressions in the future (i.e., we don’t reintroduce the bug).

The tests can be found in three places:


When in doubt, the bulk of the tests should be added as a littlecheck test in tests/checks, as they are the easiest to modify and run, and much faster and more dependable than pexpect tests. The syntax is fairly self-explanatory. It's a fish script with the expected output in # CHECK: or # CHECKERR: (for stderr) comments.

The pexpects are written in python and can simulate input and output to/from a terminal, so they are needed for anything that needs actual interactivity. The runner is in build_tools/pexpect_helper.py, in case you need to modify something there.

Local testing

The tests can be run on your local computer on all operating systems.

cmake path/to/fish-shell
make test


Git hooks

Since developers sometimes forget to run the tests, it can be helpful to use git hooks (see githooks(5)) to automate it.

One possibility is a pre-push hook script like this one:

#!/bin/sh
#### A pre-push hook for the fish-shell project
# This will run the tests when a push to master is detected, and will stop that if the tests fail
# Save this as .git/hooks/pre-push and make it executable
protected_branch='master'
# Git gives us lines like "refs/heads/frombranch SOMESHA1 refs/heads/tobranch SOMESHA1"
# We're only interested in the branches
while read from _ to _; do

if [ "x$to" = "xrefs/heads/$protected_branch" ]; then
isprotected=1
fi done if [ "x$isprotected" = x1 ]; then
echo "Running tests before push to master"
make test
RESULT=$?
if [ $RESULT -ne 0 ]; then
echo "Tests failed for a push to master, we can't let you do that" >&2
exit 1
fi fi exit 0


This will check if the push is to the master branch and, if it is, only allow the push if running make test succeeds. In some circumstances it may be advisable to circumvent this check with git push --no-verify, but usually that isn’t necessary.

To install the hook, place the code in a new file .git/hooks/pre-push and make it executable.

Coverity Scan

We use Coverity’s static analysis tool which offers free access to open source projects. While access to the tool itself is restricted, fish-shell organization members should know that they can login here <https://scan.coverity.com/projects/fish-shell-fish-shell?tab=overview> with their GitHub account. Currently, tests are triggered upon merging the master branch into coverity_scan_master. Even if you are not a fish developer, you can keep an eye on our statistics there.

Contributing Translations

Fish uses the GNU gettext library to translate messages from English to other languages.

Creating and updating translations requires the Gettext tools, including xgettext, msgfmt and msgmerge. Translation sources are stored in the po directory, named LANG.po, where LANG is the two letter ISO 639-1 language code of the target language (eg de for German).

To create a new translation:

  • generate a messages.pot file by running build_tools/fish_xgettext.fish from the source tree
  • copy messages.pot to po/LANG.po

To update a translation:

  • generate a messages.pot file by running build_tools/fish_xgettext.fish from the source tree
  • update the existing translation by running msgmerge --update --no-fuzzy-matching po/LANG.po messages.pot

The --no-fuzzy-matching is important as we have had terrible experiences with gettext's "fuzzy" translations in the past.

Many tools are available for editing translation files, including command-line and graphical user interface programs. For simple use, you can just use your text editor.

Open up the po file, for example po/sv.po, and you'll see something like:

msgid "%ls: No suitable job\n"
msgstr ""


The msgid here is the "name" of the string to translate, typically the english string to translate. The second line (msgstr) is where your translation goes.

For example:

msgid "%ls: No suitable job\n"
msgstr "%ls: Inget passande jobb\n"


Any %s / %ls or %d are placeholders that fish will use for formatting at runtime. It is important that they match - the translated string should have the same placeholders in the same order.

Also any escaped characters, like that \n newline at the end, should be kept so the translation has the same behavior.

Our tests run msgfmt --check-format /path/to/file, so they would catch mismatched placeholders - otherwise fish would crash at runtime when the string is about to be used.

Be cautious about blindly updating an existing translation file. Trivial changes to an existing message (eg changing the punctuation) will cause existing translations to be removed, since the tools do literal string matching. Therefore, in general, you need to carefully review any recommended deletions.

Setting Code Up For Translations

All non-debug messages output for user consumption should be marked for translation. In Rust, this requires the use of the wgettext! or wgettext_fmt! macros:

streams.out.append(wgettext_fmt!("%ls: There are no jobs\n", argv[0]));


All messages in fish script must be enclosed in single or double quote characters for our message extraction script to find them. They must also be translated via a command substitution. This means that the following are not valid:

echo (_ hello)
_ "goodbye"


Above should be written like this instead:

echo (_ "hello")
echo (_ "goodbye")


You can use either single or double quotes to enclose the message to be translated. You can also optionally include spaces after the opening parentheses or before the closing parentheses.

Versioning

The fish version is constructed by the build_tools/git_version_gen.sh script. For developers the version is the branch name plus the output of git describe --always --dirty. Normally the main part of the version will be the closest annotated tag. Which itself is usually the most recent release number (e.g., 2.6.0).

License

License for fish

fish Copyright © 2005-2009 Axel Liljencrantz, 2009-2024 fish-shell contributors. fish is released under the GNU General Public License, version 2.

fish includes other code licensed under the GNU General Public License, version 2, including GNU printf.

Copyright © 1990-2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Printf (from GNU Coreutils 6.9) is released under the GNU General Public License, version 2.

The GNU General Public License agreement follows.

GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE

Version 2, June 1991

Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA

Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.



Preamble

The licenses for most software are designed to take away your freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free software - to make sure the software is free for all its users. This General Public License applies to most of the Free Software Foundation's software and to any other program whose authors commit to using it. (Some other Free Software Foundation software is covered by the GNU Library General Public License instead.) You can apply it to your programs, too.

When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not price. Our General Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you have the freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for this service if you wish), that you receive source code or can get it if you want it, that you can change the software or use pieces of it in new free programs; and that you know you can do these things.

To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions that forbid anyone to deny you these rights or to ask you to surrender the rights. These restrictions translate to certain responsibilities for you if you distribute copies of the software, or if you modify it.

For example, if you distribute copies of such a program, whether gratis or for a fee, you must give the recipients all the rights that you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the source code. And you must show them these terms so they know their rights.

We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright the software, and (2) offer you this license which gives you legal permission to copy, distribute and/or modify the software.

Also, for each author's protection and ours, we want to make certain that everyone understands that there is no warranty for this free software. If the software is modified by someone else and passed on, we want its recipients to know that what they have is not the original, so that any problems introduced by others will not reflect on the original authors' reputations.

Finally, any free program is threatened constantly by software patents. We wish to avoid the danger that redistributors of a free program will individually obtain patent licenses, in effect making the program proprietary. To prevent this, we have made it clear that any patent must be licensed for everyone's free use or not licensed at all.

The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution and modification follow.

TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION

This License applies to any program or other work which contains a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed under the terms of this General Public License. The "Program", below, refers to any such program or work, and a "work based on the Program" means either the Program or any derivative work under copyright law: that is to say, a work containing the Program or a portion of it, either verbatim or with modifications and/or translated into another language. (Hereinafter, translation is included without limitation in the term "modification".) Each licensee is addressed as "you".

Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not covered by this License; they are outside its scope. The act of running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the Program (independent of having been made by running the Program). Whether that is true depends on what the Program does.


1.
You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's source code as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you conspicuously and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate copyright notice and disclaimer of warranty; keep intact all the notices that refer to this License and to the absence of any warranty; and give any other recipients of the Program a copy of this License along with the Program.

You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee.


2.
You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion of it, thus forming a work based on the Program, and copy and distribute such modifications or work under the terms of Section 1 above, provided that you also meet all of these conditions:

  • You must cause the modified files to carry prominent notices stating that you changed the files and the date of any change.
  • You must cause any work that you distribute or publish, that in whole or in part contains or is derived from the Program or any part thereof, to be licensed as a whole at no charge to all third parties under the terms of this License.
  • If the modified program normally reads commands interactively when run, you must cause it, when started running for such interactive use in the most ordinary way, to print or display an announcement including an appropriate copyright notice and a notice that there is no warranty (or else, saying that you provide a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under these conditions, and telling the user how to view a copy of this License. (Exception: if the Program itself is interactive but does not normally print such an announcement, your work based on the Program is not required to print an announcement.)

These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole. If identifiable sections of that work are not derived from the Program, and can be reasonably considered independent and separate works in themselves, then this License, and its terms, do not apply to those sections when you distribute them as separate works. But when you distribute the same sections as part of a whole which is a work based on the Program, the distribution of the whole must be on the terms of this License, whose permissions for other licensees extend to the entire whole, and thus to each and every part regardless of who wrote it.

Thus, it is not the intent of this section to claim rights or contest your rights to work written entirely by you; rather, the intent is to exercise the right to control the distribution of derivative or collective works based on the Program.

In addition, mere aggregation of another work not based on the Program with the Program (or with a work based on the Program) on a volume of a storage or distribution medium does not bring the other work under the scope of this License.



3.
You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it, under Section 2) in object code or executable form under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above provided that you also do one of the following:

  • Accompany it with the complete corresponding machine-readable source code, which must be distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange; or,
  • Accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three years, to give any third party, for a charge no more than your cost of physically performing source distribution, a complete machine-readable copy of the corresponding source code, to be distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange; or,
  • Accompany it with the information you received as to the offer to distribute corresponding source code. (This alternative is allowed only for noncommercial distribution and only if you received the program in object code or executable form with such an offer, in accord with Subsection b above.)

The source code for a work means the preferred form of the work for making modifications to it. For an executable work, complete source code means all the source code for all modules it contains, plus any associated interface definition files, plus the scripts used to control compilation and installation of the executable. However, as a special exception, the source code distributed need not include anything that is normally distributed (in either source or binary form) with the major components (compiler, kernel, and so on) of the operating system on which the executable runs, unless that component itself accompanies the executable.

If distribution of executable or object code is made by offering access to copy from a designated place, then offering equivalent access to copy the source code from the same place counts as distribution of the source code, even though third parties are not compelled to copy the source along with the object code.



4.
You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the Program is void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this License. However, parties who have received copies, or rights, from you under this License will not have their licenses terminated so long as such parties remain in full compliance.
5.
You are not required to accept this License, since you have not signed it. However, nothing else grants you permission to modify or distribute the Program or its derivative works. These actions are prohibited by law if you do not accept this License. Therefore, by modifying or distributing the Program (or any work based on the Program), you indicate your acceptance of this License to do so, and all its terms and conditions for copying, distributing or modifying the Program or works based on it.
6.
Each time you redistribute the Program (or any work based on the Program), the recipient automatically receives a license from the original licensor to copy, distribute or modify the Program subject to these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further restrictions on the recipients' exercise of the rights granted herein. You are not responsible for enforcing compliance by third parties to this License.
7.
If, as a consequence of a court judgment or allegation of patent infringement or for any other reason (not limited to patent issues), conditions are imposed on you (whether by court order, agreement or otherwise) that contradict the conditions of this License, they do not excuse you from the conditions of this License. If you cannot distribute so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations under this License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you may not distribute the Program at all. For example, if a patent license would not permit royalty-free redistribution of the Program by all those who receive copies directly or indirectly through you, then the only way you could satisfy both it and this License would be to refrain entirely from distribution of the Program.

If any portion of this section is held invalid or unenforceable under any particular circumstance, the balance of the section is intended to apply and the section as a whole is intended to apply in other circumstances.

It is not the purpose of this section to induce you to infringe any patents or other property right claims or to contest validity of any such claims; this section has the sole purpose of protecting the integrity of the free software distribution system, which is implemented by public license practices. Many people have made generous contributions to the wide range of software distributed through that system in reliance on consistent application of that system; it is up to the author/donor to decide if he or she is willing to distribute software through any other system and a licensee cannot impose that choice.

This section is intended to make thoroughly clear what is believed to be a consequence of the rest of this License.



8.
If the distribution and/or use of the Program is restricted in certain countries either by patents or by copyrighted interfaces, the original copyright holder who places the Program under this License may add an explicit geographical distribution limitation excluding those countries, so that distribution is permitted only in or among countries not thus excluded. In such case, this License incorporates the limitation as if written in the body of this License.
9.
The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions of the General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to address new problems or concerns.

Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the Program specifies a version number of this License which applies to it and "any later version", you have the option of following the terms and conditions either of that version or of any later version published by the Free Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of this License, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software Foundation.


10.
If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free programs whose distribution conditions are different, write to the author to ask for permission. For software which is copyrighted by the Free Software Foundation, write to the Free Software Foundation; we sometimes make exceptions for this. Our decision will be guided by the two goals of preserving the free status of all derivatives of our free software and of promoting the sharing and reuse of software generally.

NO WARRANTY


11.
BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES PROVIDE THE PROGRAM "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
12.
IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR REDISTRIBUTE THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER PROGRAMS), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.

License for the Python docs theme

In doc_src/python_docs_theme/, taken from https://pypi.org/project/python-docs-theme/2020.1/.

PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2

1. This LICENSE AGREEMENT is between the Python Software Foundation ("PSF"), and the Individual or Organization ("Licensee") accessing and otherwise using this software ("Python") in source or binary form and its associated documentation.

2. Subject to the terms and conditions of this License Agreement, PSF hereby grants Licensee a nonexclusive, royalty-free, world-wide license to reproduce, analyze, test, perform and/or display publicly, prepare derivative works, distribute, and otherwise use Python alone or in any derivative version, provided, however, that PSF's License Agreement and PSF's notice of copyright, i.e., "Copyright (c) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 Python Software Foundation; All Rights Reserved" are retained in Python alone or in any derivative version prepared by Licensee.

3. In the event Licensee prepares a derivative work that is based on or incorporates Python or any part thereof, and wants to make the derivative work available to others as provided herein, then Licensee hereby agrees to include in any such work a brief summary of the changes made to Python.

4. PSF is making Python available to Licensee on an "AS IS" basis. PSF MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED. BY WAY OF EXAMPLE, BUT NOT LIMITATION, PSF MAKES NO AND DISCLAIMS ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR THAT THE USE OF PYTHON WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY THIRD PARTY RIGHTS.

5. PSF SHALL NOT BE LIABLE TO LICENSEE OR ANY OTHER USERS OF PYTHON FOR ANY INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR LOSS AS A RESULT OF MODIFYING, DISTRIBUTING, OR OTHERWISE USING PYTHON, OR ANY DERIVATIVE THEREOF, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY THEREOF.

6. This License Agreement will automatically terminate upon a material breach of its terms and conditions.

7. Nothing in this License Agreement shall be deemed to create any relationship of agency, partnership, or joint venture between PSF and Licensee. This License Agreement does not grant permission to use PSF trademarks or trade name in a trademark sense to endorse or promote products or services of Licensee, or any third party.

8. By copying, installing or otherwise using Python, Licensee agrees to be bound by the terms and conditions of this License Agreement.

MIT License

fish includes a copy of Alpine.js, which is copyright 2019-2021 Caleb Porzio and contributors, and licensed under the MIT License. It also uses FindRust.cmake, from the Corrosion project, which is copyright 2018 Andrew Gaspar and licensed under the MIT license. It also includes the Dracula theme, which is copyright 2018 Dracula Team, and the Nord theme, which is copyright 2016-present Sven Greb. These themes are also used under the MIT license.

fish contains code derived from musl-libc <https://www.musl-libc.org>, which is copyright 2006-2020 Rich Felker, et al., to implement printf. This code is used under the terms of the MIT license.

The MIT license follows.

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

GNU Library General Public License

fish contains code derived from the GNU C Library, licensed under the GNU Library General Public License. This code is copyright © 1989-1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

The GNU Library General Public License agreement follows.

GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE

Version 2, June 1991

Copyright (C) 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.

[This is the first released version of the library GPL. It is
numbered 2 because it goes with version 2 of the ordinary GPL.]

Preamble

The licenses for most software are designed to take away your freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public Licenses are intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free software--to make sure the software is free for all its users.

This license, the Library General Public License, applies to some specially designated Free Software Foundation software, and to any other libraries whose authors decide to use it. You can use it for your libraries, too.

When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not price. Our General Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you have the freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for this service if you wish), that you receive source code or can get it if you want it, that you can change the software or use pieces of it in new free programs; and that you know you can do these things.

To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions that forbid anyone to deny you these rights or to ask you to surrender the rights. These restrictions translate to certain responsibilities for you if you distribute copies of the library, or if you modify it.

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2024, fish-shell developers

December 29, 2024 4